The downside risk of postponing Social Security benefits
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Joseph Friedman, Herbert E. Phillips

The downside risk of postponing Social Security benefits

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Introduction

The downside risk of postponing social security benefits. Discover the hidden downside risk of postponing Social Security benefits. For risk-averse individuals, early initiation is often better, challenging assumptions about breakeven age.

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Abstract

The point that only life participants may initiate or receive Social Security benefits is typically overlooked. Thus, a postponement of benefits at any eligible retirement age may be likened to participation in a game of chance in which the participant is subject to a variant form of the gambler's ruin at death. The typical assumption, therefore, that a participant should automatically opt for a postponement if the present value of the resulting benefits, discounted to breakeven age, higher than the present value of the oppotunity costs, carries with it the implication of risk neutrality in relation to the consequence of dying before reaching the breakeven death age. While this implication of risk neutrality is sometimes correct, it is more likely not. In marked contrast to conclusions reached in previous studies, this paper shows that a single Social Security participant, who is risk averse as regards the chances - and contingent consequences - of dying before reaching breakeven age, would be well advised to initiate benefits at the earliest age at which he or she would not be subject to earned income penalties.



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