OVERVIEW
We live in a time of great changes in the way Americans save, invest, and manage the risks to their standard of living. Economists have been studying consumers' optimal saving and investing decisions for many decades. Since the 1950s there has been enormous progress in the underlying theory, and since the 1970s major innovations in the financial markets and advances in technology have facilitated implementation of that theory. Furthermore, in the past two decades, research in behavioral economics and finance has considerably advanced our understanding of how consumers actually make saving and investment decisions. Life-cycle saving and investing have become a science, or at least the foundations have been laid for such a science.
This conference is the second in a series that brings together academic researchers, expert practitioners, and public-sector policymakers to explore what the modern science of life-cycle finance implies for households, businesses, and government.
In the 2006 conference the focus was on the pre-retirement phase of the life cycle.
In this conference the focus is on the retirement phase. We hope to encourage the adoption of best practices in the development of both new financial products and future public policies.
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View 2008 Keynote Panel Discussion
Read the monograph of the conference
Read Conference Summary by Paula Hogan
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