Life Insurance and Demographic Change: An Empirical Analysis of Surrender Decisions Based on Panel Data
View/ Open
Date
2016-12-01
Author
Gemmo, Irina
Götz, Martin
SAFE No.
240
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
Households buy life insurance as part of their liquidity management. The option to surrender such a policy can serve as a buffer when a household faces a liquidity need. In this study, we investigate empirically which individual and household specific sociodemographic factors influence the surrender behavior of life insurance policyholders. Based on the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), an ongoing wide-ranging representative longitudinal study of around 11,000 private households in Germany, we construct a proxy to identify life insurance surrender in the data. We use this proxy to conduct fixed effect regressions and support the results with survival analyses. We find that life events that possibly impose a liquidity shock to the household, such as birth of a child and divorce increase the likelihood to surrender an existing life insurance policy for an average household in the panel. The acquisition of a dwelling and unemployment are further aspects that can foster life insurance surrender. Our results are robust with respect to different models and hold conditioning on region specific trends; they vary however for different age groups. Our analyses contribute to the existing literature supporting the emergency fund hypothesis. The findings obtained in this study can help life insurers and regulators to detect and understand industry specific challenges of the demographic change.
Research Area
Household Finance
Keywords
demographic change, life insurance surrender, liquidity shock
JEL Classification
G22, J12
Topic
Systematic Risk
Stability and Regulation
Household Finance
Stability and Regulation
Household Finance
Relations
1
Publication Type
Working Paper
Link to Publication
Collections
- LIF-SAFE Working Papers [334]