Gender gap in pension savings: evidence from Peru’s individual capitalization system
Abstract
We study the gender gap in the accumulation of pension funds in Peru, a country where
the main pension system is based on individual retirement accounts. We exploit randomly
selected samples of administrative pension fund registers collected between 2005 and 2019
and find a gender gap in favour of men at each percentile of the distribution of pension
funds. The unconditional gender gap decreases along the percentiles until it reaches a sort
of “glass ceiling” around the 85th percentile, and then it increases substantially. We also
detect heterogeneity by birth cohorts, indicating that older cohorts show higher gender gaps
in pension saving because of the capitalization process. Moreover, we find that awareness
about pension fund risk management –a proxy for financial literacy– increases the dispersion
of pension savings over the distribution and, therefore, increases inequality. This
situation is aggravated by the fact that Peru has very low levels of financial literacy.
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