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Past Event

A Briefing Sponsored by the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, The Retirement Security Project, and the Pew Charitable Trusts

Savings Incentives for Low- and Middle-Income Families: A New Report From the Retirement Security Project

Retirement, Taxes, Saving, U.S. Economy


Event Summary

This path-breaking new study, conducted by H&R Block and economists from the Retirement Security Project, MIT, Harvard and UC Berkeley, examined 15,000 H&R Block tax filers in 60 offices in the St. Louis area. The tax filers were randomly offered no match, a 20 percent match, or a 50 percent match on contributions made to a new or existing IRA. The study represents the first large-scale randomized experiment on the effects of match rates on participation and contributions to retirement accounts.

Event Information

When

Tuesday, May 10, 2005
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Office of Communications

E-mail: communications@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

The study reaches two broad conclusions. First, higher match rates significantly raise IRA participation and contributions. Average IRA contributions (excluding the match) for the 20 percent and 50 percent match groups were four and eight times higher than in the control group, respectively. Second, several additional findings suggest that professional tax assistance, information provision, and ease of saving can play important roles in encouraging IRA contributions among low- and moderate-income families.

Taken together, the results suggest that the combination of a clear and understandable match for saving, easily accessible savings vehicles, the opportunity to use part of an income tax refund to save, and professional assistance could generate a significant increase in retirement saving participation and contributions, even among moderate- and low-income households.

At this briefing panelists will discuss the broad conclusions of the study and its implications for low-and middle-income households across America.

Transcript

PAULINE ABERNATHY: Economists are the butt of many jokes for saying, "assume people are perfectly rational and have perfect information." The study you are about to hear about today didn't make any assumptions. It looked at what thousands of real people did in real situations, and the study suggests that if public and private sector policies were based on its findings, we could make a real difference in increasing retirement security for millions of Americans.

The Pew Charitable Trusts is really delighted to be a part of the Retirement Security Project in trying to advance some very common-sense policies to increase retirement savings. One of the things the Pew Charitable Trusts does is advance policy solutions which can be a particularly difficult thing to do these days. But my colleagues and I at the Trusts are really confident that the Retirement Security Project staff, advisers and partners are going to demonstrate that it's still possible to do that if the evidence is sound, the solutions are practical. And we really look for common ground. Thank you.

Read the full event transcript (PDF—78kb)

Participants

Moderator

Peter R. Orszag

Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution; Retirement Security Project; Co-Director, Tax Policy Center

Panelists

Bernie Wilson

H&R Block

Jeffrey Liebman

Harvard University

William G. Gale

Vice President and Director, Economic Studies


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