Mutual Funds and Institutional Investments: What is the Most Efficient Way to Set Up Individual Accounts in a Social Security System?

E. James, Gary D. Ferrier, James H. Smalhout, Dimitri Vittas
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引用次数: 47

Abstract

One of the biggest criticisms leveled at defined contribution individual account (IA) components of social security systems is that they are too expensive. This paper investigates the cost-effectiveness of three options for constructing funded social security pillars: 1) IA's invested in the retail market with relatively open choice, 2) IA's invested in the institutional market with constrained choice among investment companies, and 3) a centralized fund without individual accounts or differentiated investments across individuals. Our questions: What is the most cost-effective way to organize a mandatory IA system, how does the cost of an efficient IA system compare with that of a single centralized fund, and are the cost differentials large enough to outweigh the other important considerations? Our answers, based on empirical evidence about mutual and institutional funds in the U.S.: The retail market (option 1) allows individual investors to benefit from scale economies in asset management, but at the cost of high marketing expenses that are needed to attract and aggregate small sums of money into large pools. In contrast, a centralized fund (option 3) can be much cheaper because it achieves scale economies without high marketing costs, but gives workers no choice and hence is subject to political manipulation and misallocation of capital. Mandatory IA systems can be structured to get the best of both worlds: to obtain scale economies in asset management without incurring high marketing costs or sacrificing worker choice. To accomplish this requires centralized collections, a modest level of investor service and constrained choice. The system of constrained choice described in this paper (option 2) is much cheaper than the retail market and only slightly more expensive than a single centralized fund. We estimate that it will cost only .14-.18% of assets annually. These large administrative cost savings imply a Pareto improvement so long as choice is not constrained too much.'
共同基金与机构投资:在社会保障体系中建立个人账户的最有效方式是什么?
对社会保障体系中个人账户固定缴款(IA)组成部分的最大批评之一是,它们太贵了。本文考察了基金型社会保障支柱的三种构建方案的成本效益:1)投资于相对开放选择的零售市场;2)投资于投资公司之间有限选择的机构市场;3)没有个人账户或个人之间差异化投资的集中基金。我们的问题是:组织强制性保险制度的最具成本效益的方法是什么?一个有效的保险制度的成本与单一的中央基金的成本相比如何?成本差异是否大到足以超过其他重要考虑因素?基于美国共同基金和机构基金的经验证据,我们的答案是:零售市场(选项1)允许个人投资者从资产管理的规模经济中受益,但代价是高昂的营销费用,这需要吸引和聚集小额资金到大池中。相比之下,一个集中的基金(选项3)可以便宜得多,因为它实现了规模经济,而不需要高昂的营销成本,但工人没有选择,因此容易受到政治操纵和资本错配的影响。强制性IA系统的结构可以达到两全其美的效果:在不产生高额营销成本或牺牲员工选择的情况下,获得资产管理的规模经济。要实现这一目标,需要集中收集、适度的投资者服务水平和有限的选择。本文中描述的受限选择系统(选项2)比零售市场便宜得多,只比单一的集中式基金贵一点点。我们估计只需花费0.14英镑。每年18%的资产。只要选择不受太多限制,这些巨大的行政成本节约意味着帕累托改进。”
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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