Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise: Retirement Planning Predicts Employee Health Improvements

  • Timothy Gubler
  • , Lamar Pierce

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    21 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    Are poor physical and financial health driven by the same underlying psychological factors? We found that the decision to contribute to a 401(k) retirement plan predicted whether an individual acted to correct poor physical-health indicators revealed during an employer-sponsored health examination. Using this examination as a quasi-exogenous shock to employees’ personal-health knowledge, we examined which employees were more likely to improve their health, controlling for differences in initial health, demographics, job type, and income. We found that existing retirement-contribution patterns and future health improvements were highly correlated. Employees who saved for the future by contributing to a 401(k) showed improvements in their abnormal blood-test results and health behaviors approximately 27% more often than noncontributors did. These findings are consistent with an underlying individual time-discounting trait that is both difficult to change and domain interdependent, and that predicts long-term individual behaviors in multiple dimensions.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1822-1830
    Number of pages9
    JournalPsychological Science
    Volume25
    Issue number9
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Sep 27 2014

    Keywords

    • domain interdependence
    • employee health
    • field data
    • intertemporal choice
    • retirement savings
    • time discounting

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