Reducing the Complexity Costs of 401(k) Participation Through Quick Enrollment
The complexity of the retirement savings decision may overwhelm employees, encouraging procrastination and reducing 401(k) enrollment rates. We study a low-cost manipulation designed to simplify the 401(k) enrollment process. Employees are given the option to make a Quick Enrollment [TM] election to enroll in their 401(k) plan at a pre-selected contribution rate and asset allocation. By decoupling the participation decision from the savings rate and asset allocation decisions, the Quick Enrollment [TM] mechanism simplifies the savings plan decision process. We find that at one company, Quick Enrollment[TM] tripled 401(k)participation rates among new employees three months after hire. When Quick Enrollment [TM] was offered to previously hired non-participating employees at two firms, participation increased by 10 to 20 percentage points among those employees affected.
Year of publication: |
2009
|
---|---|
Authors: | Laibson, David I. ; Choi, James J. ; Madrian, Brigitte |
Institutions: | Department of Economics, Harvard University |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Testimonials Do Not Convert Patients from Brand to Generic Medication
Laibson, David I., (2013)
-
What Makes Annuitization More Appealing?
Beshears, John Leonard, (2014)
-
Reinforcement Learning and Savings Behavior
Metrick, Andrew, (2009)
- More ...