Do ‘Catch-up Limits’ Raise Retirement Saving? Evidence from a Regression Discontinuity Design
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This paper studies the effect of raising contribution limits on retirement saving by exploiting the ‘catch-up
limit’ provision, a rule which allows those over the age of 50 to make higher IRA and 401(k)
contributions than those under 50. Using an age-related regression discontinuity design, I find that
eligibility for ‘catch-up limits’ leads to a large increase in total tax-deferred contributions for those
without access to a 401(k) plan. This is driven by a 25 percent increase in average IRA contributions and
a 21 percent increase in the likelihood of making an IRA contribution. I also find no significant effects on
overall 401(k) contributions. The findings suggest that, contrary to the neoclassical life-cycle model, the
response to eligibility for ‘catchup limits’ was not limited to constrained savers.
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retirement saving, tax-preferred savings accounts, contribution limits, regression discontinuity design
