Unhedgeable Inflation Risk within Pension Schemes
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| Publication date | 01-2020 |
| Journal | Insurance: Mathematics & Economics |
| Volume | Issue number | 90 |
| Pages (from-to) | 7-24 |
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| Abstract |
Pension schemes generally aim to protect the purchasing power of their participants, but cannot completely do this when due to market incompleteness inflation risk cannot be fully hedged. Without a market price for inflation risk the value of a pension contract depends on the investor’s risk appetite and inflation risk exposure. We develop a valuation framework to deal with two sources of unhedgeable inflation risk: the absence of instruments to hedge general consumer price inflation risk and differences in group-specific consumption bundles from the economy-wide bundle. We find that the absence of financial instruments to hedge inflation risks may reduce lifetime welfare by up to 6% of certainty-equivalent consumption for commonly assumed degrees of risk aversion. Regulators face a dilemma as young (workers) and old participants (retirees) have different capacities to absorb losses from unhedgeable inflation risks and as a consequence have a different risk appetite.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary file |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.insmatheco.2019.10.009 |
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