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Main Authors: Kaji, Tetsuya, Manresa, Elena
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.13275
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author Kaji, Tetsuya
Manresa, Elena
author_facet Kaji, Tetsuya
Manresa, Elena
contents We revisit the saving behavior of elderly singles using an adversarial structural estimation framework by Kaji, Manresa and Pouliot (2023). The method bridges the simulated method of moments (SMM) and maximum-likelihood estimation by embedding a flexible discriminator, implemented as a neural network, that adaptively selects the most informative features of the data. Applying this approach to the model of De Nardi, French, and Jones (2010) with AHEAD data, we show that including gender and health histories in the discriminator improves identification and precision of bequests motives. The resulting estimates reveal that bequest motives explain between $13\%$ and $19\%$ percent of late-life savings across all permanent-income quintiles, not only among the rich. The adversarial estimator precisely disentangles bequest motives from precautionary savings motives. These findings suggest that heterogeneity in health-related survival expectations is another important source of identifying variation to distinguishing bequest and precautionary saving motives.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_13275
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Why Do the Elderly Save? Using Health Shocks to Uncover Bequests Motives
Kaji, Tetsuya
Manresa, Elena
Econometrics
We revisit the saving behavior of elderly singles using an adversarial structural estimation framework by Kaji, Manresa and Pouliot (2023). The method bridges the simulated method of moments (SMM) and maximum-likelihood estimation by embedding a flexible discriminator, implemented as a neural network, that adaptively selects the most informative features of the data. Applying this approach to the model of De Nardi, French, and Jones (2010) with AHEAD data, we show that including gender and health histories in the discriminator improves identification and precision of bequests motives. The resulting estimates reveal that bequest motives explain between $13\%$ and $19\%$ percent of late-life savings across all permanent-income quintiles, not only among the rich. The adversarial estimator precisely disentangles bequest motives from precautionary savings motives. These findings suggest that heterogeneity in health-related survival expectations is another important source of identifying variation to distinguishing bequest and precautionary saving motives.
title Why Do the Elderly Save? Using Health Shocks to Uncover Bequests Motives
topic Econometrics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.13275