Critical thinking in pension design and management

There is too much trend following and too little intellectual irritation in pension management, according to Keith Ambachtsheer, principal of KPA Advisory Services.

Discoveries based on numerical studies dominate thinking in pension management and finance more generally, while the arguably more conclusive deductive reasoning is left wanting, argues Keith Ambachtsheer.

Principal of KPA Advisory Services, director at the Toronto-based Rotman International Centre for Pension Management and provocateur, Ambachtsheer says that really powerful solutions usually originate from first-principle deductive reasoning, rather than from numerical studies.

Deductive reasoning is a top-down way of thinking, with reasoning moving from a more general theory to the more specific. (Inductive reasoning is the opposite).

Woody Brock does in his latest book American Gridlock: Commonsense Solutions to the Economic Crises reminds Ambachtsheer of the tendency to quickly jump on any numbers-based study that appears to solve an important problem.

“The history of science makes it clear that most important problems have been solved by deductive logic. Information [only] re-enters the picture in the final stage of scientific discovery process known as ‘confirmation’…” writes Brock in his book.

Sponsored Content

Ambachtsheer says that retracing his personal deductive ‘discovery’ journey in the field of pension design and management over four decades confirms this truth.

He summarises four discovery statements as follows:

  •   For a pension plan to be sustainable, it has to be both transparent and inter-generationally fair
  •   For a pension plan to be sustainable, it has to be both affordable to younger participants and offer security to the older on
  •   Excellence in pension management requires mission clarity and autonomy of action, good governance, sensible investment beliefs, scale and the right people
  •   Risk premiums in financial markets vary, depending on the collective mindset of market participants.

“Deductive logic tells us that pension design and management structures built on these foundations will be both sustainable and measurably effective. We should not be surprised that a growing body of well-crafted empirical studies is now confirming these four principles,” explains Ambachtsheer.

“Woody Brock is an iconoclast,” he says. “He keeps reminding us that the all the good thinking has come out of deductive reasoning, first principles; it is such a powerful idea.”

“In pensions, historically the cost/benefit of going with the flow is really strong,” he says. “For example, if you come out and say defined benefit plans suck then you don’t have a really long career. It is difficult to be outside the box and get anyone to take you seriously.”

Part of the problem, in creating critical thinking in this industry, he says, relates to its evolution.

“The pension industry is a combination of a layperson’s approach with a trust-law overlay. In addition, because laypeople are legally bound to seek help, there is an overabundance of ‘help’ from service providers. So for players in the industry there is a sense is to defend it.”

This is destructive, Ambachtsheer says, because critical thinking can be the difference between success and failure.

“The pension design and management field has suffered from too much conventional thinking for too long. Too many people have been too intellectually lazy to examine their conventional beliefs using first-principle deductive logic.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Complexity: thinking ahead

Complexity is, well complex. And as trite as that sounds, it’s something investors, even professional investors, don’t understand well enough, according to Tim Hodgson, head of the Thinking Ahead Group at Towers Watson. The Thinking Ahead Group (TAG), as has been reported here before, gets paid to think – a gig conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com is envious of.

Study finds greenness equals performance

There is a positive correlation between the investment performance of REITs and the “greenness” of their portfolio holdings, according to a new paper by Maastricht University’s Piet Eichholtz, Nils Kok and Erkan Yonder. The paper – Portfolio greenness and the financial performance of REITs – finds that investment performance of REITs is positively related to

Benchmarking ESG changes behaviour

The power of benchmarking funds on sustainability is demonstrated by the fact 171 property companies and funds surveyed in the 2012 GRESB benchmarking report reduced GHG emissions by 6 per cent – this is a reduction of 432,000 metric tons of CO2, the equivalent of removing 85,000 cars from the road. The Global Real Estate

Taking RI from in-house to front of mind

The industry needs to be better at thinking how responsible investing can be accessed by smaller funds or those lacking sufficient internal resources, David Russell, co-head of responsible investment at the UK’s Universities Superannuation Scheme, says. Russell, who will join a panel at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Santa Monica produced by Conexus Financial, publisher

In-house not for
every house: WSIB

While the trend for most large institutional investors is to insource asset management, the $85-billion Washington State Investment Board (WSIB) has decided to take a different path. Much-cited CEM Benchmarking research shows that funds with internal-management platforms are better performers after cost, and this is largely driven by the lower costs of internal management. Many

Three-way shift in investor behaviour

There are three major behavioural shifts occurring among investors that will have significant impact on asset allocation in the next 10 years, according to a year-long study by global head of research at State Street’s Center for Applied Research, Suzanne Duncan. An increase in investor sophistication, re-evaluation of the risk/return trade-off and more discernment over

Previous