TY - JOUR AU - Feldstein,Martin AU - Ranguelova,Elena TI - Accumulated Pension Collars: A Market Approach to Reducing the Risk of Investment-Based Social Security Reform JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 7861 PY - 2000 Y2 - August 2000 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w7861 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w7861.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Martin S. Feldstein President Emeritus NBER 1050 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138-5398 Tel: 617/868-3905 Fax: 617/868-7194 E-Mail: msfeldst@nber.org Elena Ranguelova Lehmann Brothers E-Mail: eranguel@lehman.com M1 - published as Martin Feldstein, Elena Ranguelova. "Accumulated Pension Collars: A Market Approach to Reducing the Risk of Investment-Based Social Security Reform," in James M. Poterba, editor, "Tax Policy and the Economy, Volume 15" MIT Press (2001) AB - This paper shows how a new type of derivative product that could be provided by private financial markets could in principle be used to guarantee that an investment-based Social Security reform provides at least the level of real retirement income that is projected in current Social Security rules. In effect, future retirees could purchase a put option' that guarantees that the future retirement benefit will not fall below the level projected in current Social Security law or some other chosen level. To pay for this guarantee, they would agree to give up the part of the annuity payments which exceeds a given level, effectively selling a call option on the stream of payments. This market-based approach could be completely voluntary, leaving each individual to decide what level of guarantee he wants. The higher the minimum guarantee that the individual chooses, the more of the potentially higher returns he must give up. The financial market can thus tailor each individual's product to his own risk preferences. Alternatively, the government might require that any product that is sold as part of the investment-based Social Security reform must include at least some such market-based guarantee. Our analysis calculates some of the tradeoffs that could be provided in today's financial markets. We show that it is feasible to protect future benefits equal to those projected in current law with a combination of the current payroll tax rate and Personal Retirement Account savings equal to 2.5 percent of covered earnings. Raising the savings rate to 3.0 percent increases substantially the amount of the return that the individual can keep, raising it to 145 percent of the currently projected level of benefits. Reducing the guarantee level to 90 percent of the projected future benefits would increase this upside potential to 150 percent of the currently projected level of benefits with a 2.5 percent saving rate and 195 percent of the currently projected benefits with a 3.0 percent saving rate. ER -