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Efficiency in Household Decision Making: Evidence from the Retirement Savings of U.S. Couples

This paper has been awarded the 2025 TIAA Paul A. Samuelson Award. Congratulations to our researchers!

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From  Taha Choukhmane, Lucas Goodman and Cormac O'Dea

Pareto Efficiency is a core assumption of most models of household decision-making. We test this assumption using a new dataset covering the retirement saving contributions of over a million U.S. individuals. While a vast literature has failed to reject household efficiency in developed countries, we find evidence of widespread inefficiency in our setting: retirement contributions are not allocated to the account of the spouse with the highest employer match rate. This lack of coordination cannot be explained by inertia, auto-enrollment, or simple heuristics. Instead, we find that indicators of weaker marital commitment correlate with the incidence of inefficient allocations.

 

Taha Choukhmane

Taha Choukhmane

Albert F. (1942) & Jeanne P. Clear Career Development Assistant Professor in Global Management, Assistant Professor, Finance

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"Productive Efficiency in Household Decision-Making: Evidence from the Retirement Savings of US Couples."

Choukhmane, Taha, Lucas Goodman, and Cormac O'Dea. American Economic Review Vol. 115, No. 5 (2025): 1485–1519.

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Current Retirement projects from the Consumer Finance Initiative cover topics including Target Date Funds, retirement savings and portfolio choices, and racial gaps in retirement savings.  Find more Retirement research here.