| Literature DB >> 25651575 |
Jonas Radl1, Ralf K Himmelreicher2.
Abstract
This article analyzes the impact of marital status and spousal employment on the timing of retirement in Germany and Spain. Retirement behavior is examined by means of event-history models, with a competing risks framework being used to distinguish between voluntary and involuntary work-exit transitions. To take account of the role of social policies, we adopt a comparative approach. Data are drawn from a 2006 special retirement module implemented analogously in national labor force surveys. The results show that spousal labor market participation plays a large role in work-exit transitions, even when retirement is involuntary. This finding questions the widespread belief that coretirement is exclusively due to preference for joint retirement shared among spouses. Moreover, widows and widowers tend to retire prematurely in Germany, whereas no such effect could be found in Spain. This finding is explained by reference to specific economic incentives arising from national pension legislation.Entities:
Keywords: divorce; family; life course; retirement; survival analysis; widowhood
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25651575 DOI: 10.1177/0164027514536403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Aging ISSN: 0164-0275