Do
you
get
smarter
as
you
get
older,
or
do
you
slowly
lose
your
mind?
A
recent
study
from
the
University
of
California,
Riverside,
and
Columbia
University,
with
the
mind-bending
title
of
Complementary
Cognitive
Capabilities,
Economic
Decision
Making
and
Aging,
has
the
answer.
Researchers tested one group of 20-somethings against another group
of people in their 60s and 70s, in various subjects such as
basic financial literacy, knowledge about debt, how much they thought
about their financial futures, and their tolerance for risk.
Despite
a general loss of mental acuity, the older group did better than
their younger test-takers in virtually every category. How is that?
Researchers explained the results by teasing apart two different
kinds of intelligence. One is termed "fluid intelligence" and covers short-term memory
and problem solving -- the ability to manipulate information and
process it quickly. The other is called "crystallized intelligence" and involves the sum total of knowledge acquired through culture, education and a lifetime of experience.
As
we
age,
we
lose
fluid
intelligence,
but
gain
crystallized
intelligence.
The
study
concludes,
“For
decisions
that
rely
heavily
on
processing
new
information,
it
is
likely
that
the
negative
effects
of
aging
will
outweigh
its
positive
effects
relatively
early
in
middle
age.
On
the
other
hand,
if
the
decision
relies
on
recognizing
previously
learned
patterns
in
a
stable
environment,
age
may
be
an
advantage.”
In other words, young
people who can process information quickly will make better day
traders. But day traders almost always lose money.
Those of us who are more seasoned -- who have seen the ups and downs of the markets and weathered our own personal financial challenges -- are the ones who have achieved some wisdom, who make better decisions, who have the better approach to our financial lives.
Here are a few specifics distilled from the study:
Retirees have better
knowledge
of
finance
and
debt.
A
greater
understanding
of
debt
contracts
and
interest
rates
leads
older
people
to
make
better
decisions
in
the
real
world.
We
are
more
likely
to
save
and
invest
in
the
first
place, then
make
better
decisions
such
as
choosing
mutual
funds
with
low
fees.
We avoid high-cost
borrowing,
such
as credit-card
debt,
and
also
avoid
incurring
other
financial
costs
such
as
high
bank
fees. How many of us carry over a credit-card balance? Not many, I'd bet.
Older people have more
control over their
emotions. We are less
likely
to
follow
the
crowd
into
a
hot
stock,
only
to
lose our
shirts. (Okay, my brother-in-law is the exception that proves the rule.) We
are
less
likely
to
buy
at
the
top,
or
sell
at
the
bottom,
and will
not
get
sucked
into
a
financial
bubble
that
is
going
to
burst.
Who
suffered
the
most
during
the
housing
bubble
of
the
2000s?
Not
retirees,
but
first-time
buyers.
We are "better at
avoiding the influence of
irrelevant alternatives." Older
investors, according to the researchers,
can
tune
out the
noise
from
CNBC
and
other
financial
media,
which
give
too
much
attention
to
the
current
news,
even
when
it's
not important
to our
actual
investments.
The
latest
new stock issue (think Twitter), or yet another impasse
in
Washington,
can
get
everyone excited.
But
older
investors
know
that
this
week's news
is
usually
forgotten
by
next
week.
Older investors have a
better sense of their
own limitations.
Young
people
tend to be overconfident.
We older
people
have
gone
through
some
bitter
experiences
and know
that we
can
sometimes
misjudge
things.
And
there
is
no
more
important
quality
in
managing your finances than
a
bit
of
humility.
Experienced
investors
know
when
to
swallow
hard
and
cut losses
when
they
are
still
small,
rather
than
wait
and
hope
and
pray
that
an
investment
will
somehow
work
out
when
all
the
evidence
says
it
will
not.
Seniors have more
perspective and are more
patient. We
are
not
after
the
quick
buck. We
are
more
able
to
weather
the
ups
and
downs
of
the
market,
without
panicking
and
changing our
minds
with
every
twist
of
the
financial
wind.
Anyway, this is all what four academics from Columbia University and the University of California concluded. I think financial decisions are also largely determined by people's personalities. Some people are risk-takers; others are more conservative. Some people do their homework; others are more impulsive. But still, I think these researchers are onto something. I'm sure not going to argue with them ... especially since they make us seniors look pretty smart!
8 comments:
Somewhat related: One of the local news programs has been making a big deal lately about the brain changes that make elders more likely to fall victim to scams. The theory of the study (sorry I don't recall enough to know whose study it was) was that parts of the brain shrivel that allow us to discriminate scam from fact. We are too trusting.
Cop Car
I think family backgrounds play a part as well. My contemporaries, raised by parents who suffered during the Great Depression, seem to be more conservative in financial matters than younger generations.
I agree with Dick. The Depression affected my parents, and their attitudes shaped my experiences as I grew up.
However, when I was younger, I was duped a time or two by some con artist selling something. Today, I can resist much, but sometimes, I may be too careful. Call it the once burned twice shy phenomena.
Schmidleysscribbins--Some of us have been around long enought to have been burned enough times that we wouldn't fall for anything!
Cop Car
After the market crashed in 2008, we have not invested in it at all. David has a profit sharing plan at work that is being invested in mutual funds by his former employer's CPA, and those investments have been very good. That's why David intends to keep his money there for a few years.
I don't "play" the market, but I invested all my retirement funds into stocks and had to decide how to split it all up to insure I wouldn't lose everything. It was intimidating, but I think we made some good choices, since we only lost about 10% during the Great Recession and most has returned. Good post.
Thanks for reinforcing the fact that I'm smart. I keep telling this to people but no one seems to be buying it.
I started investing early, and I learned never to get out of the market during downturns. You just have to suck it up and stick it out.
During the 2009 downturn my investments were down a lot, but have recovered, and if you ignore the downs and ups have returned an annual average of 4% over the period.
My teenage daughters are not yet financially savvy, but the older one, in college, is frugal with her money. It's a good sign.
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