Volume 30, Number 5 1995

Hurd, Michael D. and Kathleen McGarry. 1995. "Evaluation of the Subjective Probabilities of Survival in the Health and Retirement Study." Journal of Human Resources 30(5):S268-S292.

In the Health and Retirement Study respondents were asked about the chances they would live to be 75 or to 85. We analyze these responses to determine if they behave like probabilities of survival, if their averages are close to average probabilities in the population, and if they have correlations with other variables that are similar to correlations with actual mortality outcomes. We find that generally they do behave like probabilities and that they do aggregate to population probabilities. Most remarkable, however, is that they covary with other variables in the same way actual outcomes vary with the variables. For example, respondents with higher socioeconomic status give higher probabilities of survival, whereas respondents who smoke give lower probabilities. We conclude that these measures of subjective probabilities have great potential use in models of intertemporal decision-making under uncertainty.

Michael D. Hurd is a professor of economics at the State University of New York and a researcher at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Kathleen McGarry is a professor of economics at the University of California-Los Angeles and a researcher at the national Bureau of Economics Research. Financial support from the University of Michigan and the National Institute on Aging is gratefully acknowledged. Many thanks to Nancy Cole for research assistance. The data used in this article are from the alpha release of the HRS.


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