dc.description.abstract | This thesis consists of four papers. Common to the first three papers is the framework for analy-
sis; a life-cycle model of a borrowing-constrained individuals consumption and portfolio choices in
the presence of uncertain labour income. The income process, taxes and pension systems are also
realistically calibrated.
The first paper investigates some welfare e¤ects of forced saving through a mandatory pension
scheme. Pension benefits stem from both a de
ned benefit and a notionally defined contribution part,
the latter indexed to stochastic aggregate labour income. It is shown that, early in life, individuals
attribute little value to their pension savings. Furthermore, for individuals in mid-life, the welfare loss
associated with the dependency between pension returns and labour income growth is estimated to
1.2% of annual consumption.
The second paper investigates the diversification demand of an individual faced with the alterna-
tive, through an individual account in a mandatory pension scheme, of exchanging aggregate labour
income risk for equity exposure. It is shown that, depending on age and exchange premium, indi-
viduals will be either buyers or sellers of such swaps, and that inter-generational risk sharing can
therefore be achieved.
The third paper explores the recent transition from defined benefit to defined contribution for
white-collar workers in Sweden. The main result is that individuals with the characteristic of a low
expected pre-retirement income relative to average income during working life and high variance in
earnings are winners (typically, men with university degree in the private sector), and that those with
the opposite characteristic (typically, women with university degree in the public sector) would be
losers.
The aim of the fourth and final paper is to determine whether there is a home bias among the
newly established Swedish National Pension Funds. Estimation errors in historical estimates of return
moments make traditional analysis of the home bias puzzle work poorly. Therefore, this paper takes
another approach by using the information available to the fund. The results demonstrate a significant
bias towards domestic equities that cannot be explained by informational advantage or any other risk
and return based explanation. | en |