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Could “Tontines” Expand the Market for Longevity Insurance?

Gal Wettstein

Issues in Brief from Center for Retirement Research

Abstract: A big challenge facing retirees is how to draw down their nest egg in retirement. The main consideration is insuring against “longevity risk” – the possibility of outliving one’s savings – without unduly restricting spending. One solution is to buy an annuity, which converts wealth into an income stream that is guaranteed until death. Common annuities include Social Security and traditional employer pensions. However, Social Security is not intended to be the sole source of retirement income and pensions in the private sector are rapidly disappearing, so buying an additional annuity with savings is often a good idea. Yet few people actually do. Many reasons exist for the lack of annuitization. These include the complexity of the product and the fear of giving up one’s wealth and then dying too soon to “break even.” A simpler reason is price, since annuity prices include a premium to protect the insurer selling the policy against longevity risk.1 Given the lack of interest in annuities, some policy experts have begun advocating an alternative form of longevity insurance – a “tontine” – which would require insurers to assume less risk and, in turn, charge lower premiums. Tontines, which do not currently exist in the marketplace, are the topic of this brief. The discussion proceeds as follows. The first section describes a basic tontine and how it differs from an annuity. The second section discusses the legal status of tontines. The third section explores the central tradeoff of a tontine: lower cost for less insurance. The fourth section describes a way to eliminate a potential downside of the payout pattern of tontines. The final section concludes that some of the enthusiasm for tontines is well placed but drawbacks also exist.

Pages: 6 pages
Date: 2018-04
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-age, nep-ias, nep-mfd and nep-rmg
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