Trends in German households’ portfolio behavior - assessing the importance of age- and cohort-effects
Inhalt
We start out from a comparison of aggregate trends in German households’ portfolio shares and
participation rates as they derive from micro data and from the National Accounts. We find the
broad trends supported by both data sources. By international comparison the portfolio share of
safe investments with banks in Germany has always been high. It is continuously and strongly
declining though. Life insurance has gained substantial importance since the 1960s. In the 1990s
it lost some of its previous dominance with the rise of stocks and mutual funds. We find that the
popularity of mutual funds continued through the stock market downturn. The baisse caused
rather few investors to finally quit on direct investments in the stock market.
Looking at the underlying developments at the age- and cohort-level, we aim to compare
empirical life-cycle trajectories with the implications of theoretical models and assess the
importance of age- and cohort-effects in the observed aggregate trends. We find the rising
importance of securities as well as the declining share of saving accounts to be prominent at
almost all ages. We observe a declining importance of life insurance for the oldest cohorts and –
somewhat surprisingly – for the youngest cohorts.
Last, we use a decomposition of the observed trends into age- and cohort-effects and highlight
the crucial assumptions that there is a unique age-profile and cohort differences all take the form
of shifts to this age-profile. We argue that both assumptions might well be at odds with
theoretical considerations and therefore harm the desired interpretation.
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