TY - JOUR
T1 - Health insurance and retirement behavior
T2 - Evidence from the health and retirement survey
AU - Rogowski, Jeannette
AU - Karoly, Lynn
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by grant 1-R01-HS-07048 from the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research and contract J-9-P-2-0017 from the Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration, US Department of Labor. The authors have contributed equally to the research. We would like to thank Randall Hirscher for providing programming assistance and Barbara Eubank-Thurston for manuscript preparation.
PY - 2000/7
Y1 - 2000/7
N2 - This paper studies the role of health insurance in the retirement decisions of older workers. As policymakers consider mechanisms for how to increase access to affordable health insurance for the near elderly, considerations of the potential labor force implications of such policies will be important to consider - potentially inducing retirements just at a time when the labor force is shrinking. Using data from the 1992 and 1996 waves of the Health and Retirement Survey, this study demonstrates that access to post-retirement health insurance has a large effect on retirement. Among older male workers, those with retiree health benefit offers are 68% more likely to retire (and those with non-employment based insurance are 44% more likely to retire) than their counterparts who would lose employment-based health insurance upon retirement. In addition, the study demonstrated that in retirement models, when retiree health benefits are controlled for, the effects of pension coverage are reduced, suggesting that these effects may have been overestimated in the prior literature. Copyright (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V.
AB - This paper studies the role of health insurance in the retirement decisions of older workers. As policymakers consider mechanisms for how to increase access to affordable health insurance for the near elderly, considerations of the potential labor force implications of such policies will be important to consider - potentially inducing retirements just at a time when the labor force is shrinking. Using data from the 1992 and 1996 waves of the Health and Retirement Survey, this study demonstrates that access to post-retirement health insurance has a large effect on retirement. Among older male workers, those with retiree health benefit offers are 68% more likely to retire (and those with non-employment based insurance are 44% more likely to retire) than their counterparts who would lose employment-based health insurance upon retirement. In addition, the study demonstrated that in retirement models, when retiree health benefits are controlled for, the effects of pension coverage are reduced, suggesting that these effects may have been overestimated in the prior literature. Copyright (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0167-6296(00)00038-2
DO - 10.1016/S0167-6296(00)00038-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 11010239
AN - SCOPUS:0034237473
SN - 0167-6296
VL - 19
SP - 529
EP - 539
JO - Journal of Health Economics
JF - Journal of Health Economics
IS - 4
ER -