| Social Security, Retirement and Wealth: Theory and Implications (2003) | |||||||||||||||||
Abstract | |||||||||||||||||
| The effect of Social Security rules on the age people choose to retire can be critical in evaluating proposed changes to those rules. This research derives a theory of retirement that views retirement as a special type of labor supply decision. This decision is driven by wealth and substitution effects on labor supply, interacting with a fixed cost of working that makes low hours of work unattractive. The theory is tractable analytically, and therefore well-suited for analyzing proposals that affect Social Security. This research examines how retirement age varies with generosity of Social Security benefits. A ten-percent reduction in the value of benefits would lead individuals to postpone retirement by between one-tenth and one-half a year. Individuals who are relatively buffered from the change-because they are wealthier or because they are younger and therefore can more easily increase saving to offset the cut in benefits-will have smaller changes in their retirement ages.. Social Security Administration. http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50565/1/wp054.pdf | |||||||||||||||||
Publication details | |||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||