Researchers Claim Dartmouth Retirement Participation Success
January 13, 2010 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – Researchers
studying how best to get women and low-income workers to save for retirement
were able to achieve a 56% enrollment hike among their target audience at
Dartmouth College.
A news release said researchers Annamaria Lusardi and
Punam Anand Keller achieved the participation increase among employees at the
college after conducting a series of financial planning surveys and employee
focus groups and then developing a print and video education campaign based on
the results. The research was financed by the National Endowment for Financial
Education (NEFE).
According to the announcement, the video
programs resulted in a 56.2%-increase in those electing to join a retirement
savings program within 30 days of viewing the communication programs compared
to similar decisions among target employees who did not see the four program videos
during the study period (January to June 2008). These differences were sustained after 60 and
90 days.
The study focused on
women and lower-income employees because of disproportionately lower financial
literacy levels and lower retirement savings participation rates. “We are
particularly interested in women and low-income employees because these groups
face unique savings challenges,” Lusardi said in the news release. “Women, for example, live longer than men and
they are normally the caretakers for children or aging parents. To take care of
their families, they first have to take care of themselves.”
Lusardi and Keller said they tested the
effectiveness of the educational effort by surveying Dartmouth workers before
and after being exposed to a printed flyer distributed in a new employee
benefits package and the program videos, including one shown during new employee
orientation.
Based on the surveys and in addition to the
participation gains, the researchers claimed their program was successful in:
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Reducing employee anxiety about being able to
meet future retirement needs.
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Increasing awareness of the importance of
financial knowledge, including a heightened interest in professional advice. “In
particular, we demonstrate our communication programs increased the importance
of thinking about the future, the need for personal control over retirement
saving, perceived manageability of the future, and the importance of job
stability,” the researchers wrote.
“[Our research subjects] know what they want
to accomplish with savings. However, there is a gulf between what people aim
for and their perceived ability to get there,” Lusardi said in the announcement.
“We hear over and over that people feel they are not sophisticated investors
and that they do not know where to start. People are very different and those
differences should be taken into account when devising saving initiatives.”