Latent Work Capacity and Retirement Expectations

Date
Monday 18 Nov 2019, 12:00 - 13:00
Type
Seminar
Room
C1-1
Building
Theil Building
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Kathleen Mullen

Understanding how health decline influences retirement decisions is fundamental for the design of targeted policies that encourage working longer. While there is wide agreement on the relevance of age-related health decline for determining labour supply and retirement decisions, the process of how health deterioration affects labor supply remains a black box.

This paper explores the match between individuals’ functional abilities and job demands in the national economy using a new methodology to measure work capacity. Specifically, we construct a one-dimensional measure of individuals’ work capacity by comparing individuals’ own ability levels to the levels needed to perform different occupations, using new data containing individuals’ ratings of the same 52 abilities included in the Occupational Information Network (O*NET) database.

We find that a one-unit increase in the fraction of jobs for a given education level that an individual can do—our measure of work capacity—is associated with a 15-21 pp. increase in labour force participation, a 10-17 pp. decrease in the percentage of respondents receiving SSDI benefits, a 7-10 pp. increase in the subjective percent chance individuals will work longer, a 9-12 pp increase in the chance that retired individuals will return to the labor force, and a 17-25 pp. increase in the chance that individuals with disabilities will return to the labor force. The magnitudes of these associations are all economically relevant and exist even when controlling for health status.

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