Optimal Defaults and Active Decisions *
Massachusetts Institute of Technology · National Bureau of Economic Research · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Defaults often have a large influence on consumer decisions. We identify an overlooked but practical alternative to defaults: requiring individuals to make an explicit choice for themselves. We study such "active decisions" in the context of 401(k) saving. We find that compelling new hires to make active decisions about 401(k) enrollment raises the initial fraction that enroll by 28 percentage points relative to a standard opt-in enrollment procedure, producing a savings distribution three months after hire that would take 30 months to achieve under standard enrollment. We also present a model of 401(k) enrollment and derive conditions under which the optimal enrollment regime is automatic enrollment (i.e.,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 56.54
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 43
Authors
5- GCGabriel CarrollCorresponding
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- JJJames J. Choi
National Bureau of Economic Research, Yale University
- DLDavid Laibson
National Bureau of Economic Research, Harvard University
- BCBrigitte C. Madrian
Harvard University, National Bureau of Economic Research
- AMAndrew Metrick
National Bureau of Economic Research, Yale University
Topics & keywords
- Default
- Procrastination
- Context (archaeology)
- Actuarial science
- Fraction (chemistry)
- Economics
- Business
- Finance
- Quality Education