Behavioral Economics Can Educate Employees

Plan sponsors can use behavioral economics to educate employees about saving for retirement.  

Participants’ “suboptimal” decisions over time can result in an older workforce because of delayed retirement, as well as higher labor costs and lower productivity. Sibson Consulting’s Paper, “Using Behavioral Economics to Encourage Employees to Make Better Decisions about their 401(k) Plans,” explains why employees make poor decisions regarding their 401(k) plans, as well as how organizations can help improve their decision-making.

Although people should rationally contemplate important decisions, many find the process laborious and instead rely on mental shortcuts and cognitive biases, according to Sibson’s paper. Some of these biases and mental shortcuts include excessively discounting future costs and benefits; complexity aversion, or procrastinating because of too many complex options; and clue-seeking bias, or looking for clues they hope will be helpful for decision-making. “People aren’t as concerned about future costs as they are [about] present costs,” Chris Goldsmith, vice president of Sibson and co-author of the paper, told PLANADVISER. As a result, they discount future costs on an irrational level.

To help combat these biases, plan sponsors and advisers can communicate in a manner that helps employees relate to what their lives will be like in retirement, Sibson’s paper explained. Goldsmith cited a study—“Increasing Saving Behavior Through Age-Progressed Renderings of the Future Self,” published in the Journal of Marketing Research—in which half the participants saw a current image of themselves and the other half saw a “virtual reality-type” image of themselves in their elderly years. Those who saw their future selves contributed on average 1.8% more to their retirement plans than those who saw their current image. “That’s very significant over a long time frame,” Goldsmith said.

Decisions are made using both the rational and emotional sides of the brain, so sponsors and advisers must be attuned to this when educating participants about saving for retirement, Goldsmith said. “We can’t underestimate the importance of emotion in everyday decision-making,” he emphasized.

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Goldsmith suggested several methods sponsors and advisers can use to help participants make sound decisions:  

  • Use testimonials. Testimonials of employees who have saved adequately for retirement, as well as those who regret not saving, are a great way to inform participants about the importance of saving.  
  • Outline lost opportunities. Sponsors and advisers can discuss with employees the opportunities they missed by not contributing enough, or not contributing at all. For example, sponsors or advisers can meet with employees and say, “If you had contributed X during the rising market, in 25 years you would have accumulated Y.” 
  • Make saving easy. Plan sponsors must guide employees through the process of making better choices the next year and should educate them about how to do this. Explore all options for saving, including automatically rolling over extra sick and vacation days into the employee’s 401(k) plan.  
  • Contemplate the investment option order. This can be difficult because vendors and plan sponsors may want to list the investment options in alphabetical order to appear unbiased. However, placing the options in an A to Z list can be problematic, as participants may simply choose investments only from the beginning of the list. “Ordering has a big impact on the choices that people make,” Goldsmith said.  

Advisers play a role in educating plan sponsors and participants on the influence of behavioral economics. Many advisers are familiar with the research, Goldsmith explained, yet have not applied it to the advice-giving process. “But I think we’re on the verge of advisers focusing on the behavioral aspect of investments,” he added.

Sibson’s research is available here.

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