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Key Findings

401(k) Participation Impact on Assets

401(k) participation has a positive causal effect on accumulated financial assets, with larger impacts at higher quantiles of the wealth distribution

Treatment Effects Vary by Savings Preference

Local quantile treatment effects show minimal impact for those with low savings preferences but substantial positive effects for those with higher savings preferences

Robust High-Dimensional Methods

Novel estimation methods allow for valid inference even with many control variables, producing stable results across different model specifications

Average Treatment Effects of 401(k) Participation

  • LATE (Local Average Treatment Effect) shows $11,579 increase in financial assets
  • LATE-T (Treatment Effect on Treated) indicates $15,969 increase
  • Effects remain stable across different control specifications

Local Quantile Treatment Effects

  • Effects increase substantially at higher quantiles
  • 10th percentile shows ~$2,000 effect
  • 90th percentile shows ~$30,000 effect

Method Performance Across Specifications

  • Selection-based estimates remain stable across specifications
  • Standard errors decrease with variable selection methods
  • Results robust to different control variable sets

Contribution and Implications

  • Develops new methods for treatment effect estimation with many control variables
  • Demonstrates importance of accounting for heterogeneous treatment effects across the wealth distribution
  • Provides evidence supporting effectiveness of 401(k) programs for increasing household savings

Data Sources

  • Average treatment effects visualization based on Table I estimates
  • Quantile treatment effects chart constructed from data shown in Figures 1 and 2
  • Method performance comparison derived from empirical results in Section 7