CDHA CAAR

July 9, 2012

CAAR – National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper – July 9, 2012

Filed under: Working Papers — Tags: , — admin @ 4:38 pm

When Does It Pay to Delay Social Security? The Impact of Mortality, Interest Rates, and Program Rules,” by John B. Shoven and Sita Nataraj Slavov (w18210, July 2012, .pdf format, 30p.).

Abstract:

Social Security benefits may be commenced at any time between ages 62 and 70. As individuals who claim later can, on average, expect to receive benefits for a shorter period, an actuarial adjustment is made to the monthly benefit to reflect the age at which benefits are claimed. In earlier work (Shoven and Slavov, 2012), we investigated the actuarial fairness of this adjustment for individuals with average life expectancy for their cohort. We found that for current real interest rates, delaying is actuarially advantageous for a large subset of people, particularly for primary earners in married couples. In this paper, we quantify the degree of actuarial advantage or disadvantage for individuals whose mortality differs from the average. We find that at real interest rates close to zero, most households – even those with mortality rates that are twice the average – benefit from some delay, at least for the primary earner. At real interest rates closer to their historical average, however, singles with mortality that is substantially greater than average do not benefit from delay; however, primary earners with high mortality can still improve the present value of the household’s benefits through delay. We also investigate the extent to which the actuarial advantage of delay has grown since the early 1960s, when the choice of when to claim first became available, and we decompose this growth into three effects: (1) the effect of changes in Social Security’s rules, (2) the effect of changes in the real interest rate, and (3) the effect of changes in life expectancy.

papers.nber.org/papers/w18210

CAAR – Swiss National Bank Working Paper – July 9, 2012

Filed under: Working Papers — Tags: — admin @ 4:36 pm

Retirement Age across Countries: The Role of Occupations,” by Philip Saure and Hosny Zoabi (Working Paper No. 2012-06, April 2012, .pdf format, 47p.).

Abstract:

Cross-country variation in average retirement age is usually attributed to institutional differences that affect individuals’ incentives to retire. We suggest a different approach. Since workers in different occupations naturally retire at different ages, the composition of occupations within an economy matters for its average retirement age. Using U.S. data we infer the average retirement age by occupation, which we then use to predict the retirement age of 38 countries according to the occupational composition of these countries. Our findings suggest that the differences in occupational composition explain up to 39.2% of the observed cross-country variation in retirement age.

www.snb.ch/n/mmr/reference/working_paper_2012_06/source

CAAR-Conferencealerts.com Gerontology Conferences-Jul. 9, 2012

Filed under: Conferences — Tags: , — admin @ 4:16 pm

Conferencealerts has recently added the following gerontology related conferences:

Sep. 14, 2012:   2nd annual Sexuality, Intimacy & Aging Conference-Chester, Pennsylvania

Oct. 22, 2012: Keystone Symposia: Aging and Diseases of Aging-Tokyo, Japan

Nov. 14, 2012:     GSA’s 65th Annual Scientific Meeting-San Diego, California

Nov. 15, 2012: Healthy Aging-Frankfurt, Germany

www.conferencealerts.com/topic-listing?topic=Gerontology

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