OP, I think you're trolling and, if so, you got me. Here's your meal.
If taking a position in management fills a void, and is what you need to do to feel better about yourself, then do it. While some consider it "bettering themselves", others do not seek out that ego boost to maintain their self-worth.
For me, my day ends at 3:30pm, and each night I sleep well in the knowledge that no problems from this day will still be on my plate come tomorrow.
My dad was a manager and advised me to avoid it unless I felt an overwhelming need to and, if I could not resist the need for ascendancy, to drift towards the engineering realm.
Management does get paid better (if it were a strictly 40-hr workweek for all). But it seems my manager is bothered at all times of the day and night, without additional compensation.
I talked to a poor soul in IT who was pulled into a number of trouble-shooting conference calls while on vacation, a man who answered under the oppressive fear that he might not have a job to come back to (his words) if the current problem at hand was not solved (though, to be fair, that was under a leadership regime that is no longer here - the current team seems much more moral, decent and accommodating, IMHO).
Your pension gets frozen which may be a plus as, depending on your age and NCSD, your buyout may be diminishing rather than accruing.
Your 401k match is better, to the best of my knowledge.
You lose protections in terms of your continued employment, as you're now "at will".
You may face peers that undermine you, to your detriment, in terms of continued employment, and bonuses. It can be very Machiavellian in some groups, rather than collaborative, as you're competing for a piece of a finite pie (i.e., Hunger Games). You would be amazed at how cunning, immoral, and mean some people become under these circumstances - very cut throat but, again, that may also be a thing of the past. I do not know.
Best of luck pal, whatever your decision and, if you're not just trollin'