Abstract:This paper studies whether U.S. public pension funds reach for yield by taking more investment risk in a low interest rate environment. To study funds' risk-taking behavior, we first present a simple theoretical model relating risk-taking to the level of risk-free rates, to their underfunding, and to the fiscal condition of their state sponsors. The theory identifies two distinct channels through which interest rates and other factors may affect risk-taking: by altering plans' funding ratios, and by changing r… Show more
“…See for exampleMaddaloni and Peydró (2011), Chodorow-Reich (2014),Jiménez et al (2014),Hanson and Stein (2015),Andonov, Bauer, and Cremers (2017), DiMaggio and Kacperczyk (2017),Lu et al (2019), andOzdagli and Wang (2019).…”
“…See for exampleMaddaloni and Peydró (2011), Chodorow-Reich (2014),Jiménez et al (2014),Hanson and Stein (2015),Andonov, Bauer, and Cremers (2017), DiMaggio and Kacperczyk (2017),Lu et al (2019), andOzdagli and Wang (2019).…”
We study effects of state pension windfalls on property prices near state borders, where theory suggests real estate reflects the value of additional public resources. Windfalls have grown to half the size of total state tax revenues and provide plausibly well-identified variation in fiscal conditions. We find one dollar of exogenous variation in pension asset returns increases border house prices by approximately two dollars. These estimates suggest governments, rather than wasting incremental resources, allocate additional funds towards high value projects or tax abatement. Evidence of larger effects in financially constrained municipalities highlight how fiscal resources amplify welfare effects of economic shocks.
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