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Home >  Books >  Assessing the Effectiveness of Savings Incentives
Assessing the Effectiveness of Savings Incentives
Print Mail
By R. Glenn Hubbard, Jonathan S. Skinner
Posted: Saturday, January 1, 2000
Assessing the Effectiveness of Savings Incentives
44 pages
AEI Press  (Washington)
Publication Date: November 1996
Paperback
ISBN: 0-8447-7071-X
Price: $ 9.95
Add to Cart  
Examination Copies

Do saving incentives such as IRAs stimulate new saving or merely reshuffle existing assets? Concluding that IRAs and 401(k)s do increase saving, the authors also provide a new cost-benefit approach for analyzing the "success" of savings incentives by comparing the new saving to the government tax revenue lost through contributions to IRAs and 401(k)s.

R. Glenn Hubbard is a visiting scholar at AEI and the Russell L. Carson Professor of Economics and Finance at Columbia University. Jonathan S. Skinner is professor of economics at Dartmouth College.



Table of Contents

Foreword

  1. What Do We Know about Individual Retirement Accounts?
  2. What Do We Know about 401(k) Plans?
  3. A Cost-Benefit Approach to Savings Incentives
  4. Should We Have Saving Incentives At All?
  5. Conclusions

Notes
References
About the Authors

Related Links
Related Book: Personal Saving, Consumption, and Tax Policy
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Source Notes: Part of the AEI Studies on Tax Reform series


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