Conscientious people earn more and save more for retirement

March 29, 2011
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ANN ARBOR—Americans who are more conscientious have higher lifetime earnings and save more for retirement, according to researchers at the University of Michigan Retirement Research Center.

Individuals who are at the 85th percentile of conscientiousness earn about $1,500 more per year than the average American, which amounts to about $96,000 more in lifetime earnings and $158,000 more in lifetime savings.

“Conscientious people are reliable, meet deadlines and pay their bills on time,” said Angela Lee Duckworth, a University of Pennsylvania psychologist and co-author of a paper on the subject with University of Michigan economist David Weir. “They are very hard working and self-disciplined. These are the people who go running, stick to their diets, and tend not to procrastinate.”

The working paper by Duckworth and Weir, titled, “Personality, Lifetime Earnings, and Retirement Wealth,” is based on almost 10,000 adults aged 50 and older who participated in the U-M Health and Retirement Study (HRS) in 2006 and 2008.

“This is a good example of the kind of discovery that can only come from a truly interdisciplinary project,” said Weir, principal investigator of the HRS. “No other study combines high-quality data on wealth, personality characteristics and cognitive ability with lifetime earnings records from Social Security.”

Duckworth and Weir found that, collectively, personality traits have as much impact on earnings as cognitive ability. Respondents rated themselves using a scale of 1 to 4 on 26 adjectives from the Big Five taxonomy of personality traits: conscientiousness, emotional stability, agreeableness, extraversion and openness to experience.

Adults who are more emotionally stable earn more per year than the average American, but they don’t necessarily save more. And, somewhat surprisingly, individuals who are agreeable or open to experience earn less and save less over their lifetimes. Extraverts earn about the same as introverts but save more money.

“One of the exciting things about working on personality, as opposed to other aspects of the individual like IQ, is that there is some hope that conscientiousness can be changed, can be deliberately cultivated, particularly in children, but arguably across the entire life course,” said Duckworth.

What makes some people more conscientious than others?

According to Duckworth, “One possibility is that conscientious people are conscientious because they believe that they can actually have an effect on their life outcomes. Or maybe they just have habits that differentiate them from less conscientious individuals. We don’t have answers yet, but we’re starting to formulate the questions.”

The research was supported by a grant from the U.S. Social Security Administration.

 

Established in 1998, the Michigan Retirement Research Center promotes research on retirement and Social Security policy; communicates findings to the policy community and the public; enhances access to research data; and helps to train new scholars. MRRC serves the public and policy community as an authoritative source of information on a range of research issues related to retirement income security. Visit the MRRC website at http://www.mrrc.isr.umich.edu/ for more information. MRRC is a unit of the Institute for Social Research (ISR).

Established in 1949, ISR is among the world’s oldest academic survey research organizations, and a world leader in the development and application of social science methodology. ISR conducts some of the most widely cited studies in the nation, including the Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers, the American National Election Studies, the Monitoring the Future Study, the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, the Health and Retirement Study and the National Survey of Black Americans. ISR researchers also collaborate with social scientists in more than 60 nations on the World Values Surveys and other projects, and the institute has established formal ties with universities in Poland, China and South Africa. ISR is also home to the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, the world’s largest computerized social science data archive. Visit the ISR website at http://www.isr.umich.edu/home/ for more information.


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