| Literature DB >> 30277529 |
Sol Richardson1, Ewan Carr1,2, Gopalakrishnan Netuveli1,3, Amanda Sacker1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although the effects of individual-level factors on wellbeing change following work exit have been identified, the role of welfare-state variables at the country level has yet to be investigated.Entities:
Keywords: Europe; Markov Chain Monte Carlo; benefits; multilevel; retirement; social-protection; variance explained; welfare state; wellbeing; work exit
Year: 2019 PMID: 30277529 PMCID: PMC6469302 DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyy205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Epidemiol ISSN: 0300-5771 Impact factor: 7.196
Glossary of terms and summary of countries included in the analytic sample by welfare-state regime
| Term | Definition | |
|---|---|---|
| Hedonic wellbeing | This perspective of wellbeing emphasizes maximization of pleasurable experiences and minimization suffering. This includes not only bodily or physical pleasures, but allows any pursuit of goals or valued outcomes to lead to happiness | |
| Eudaemonic wellbeing | This perspective emphasizes personal development and realizing one’s potential. Eudemonic wellbeing reflects positive functioning, personal expressiveness and aspects of self-actualization such as autonomy, personal growth, self-acceptance, life purpose, mastery and positive relatedness | |
| Welfare typology | A scheme used to categorize countries by welfare regime. Various competing typologies exist, with each emphasizing different aspects of welfare states such as social spending, decommodification or ideology | |
| Welfare regimeb | Categories of welfare states within a typology. In Esping-Andersen’s view, | |
| Decommodificationb | The extent to which individuals and families can maintain a normal and socially acceptable standard of living regardless of their market performance. Conversely, commodification relates to the extent to which workers and their families are reliant upon the market sale of their labour | |
| Welfare regime | Description | Countries |
| Bismarckian | Influenced by early social-welfare policies enacted by German chancellor Otto von Bismarck. These policies are distinguished by its ‘status-differentiating’ welfare programmes in which cash benefits are often earnings-related, administered through employers and geared towards maintaining existing social hierarchies. The role of the family in providing care services is also emphasized and the redistributive impact of welfare transfers is minimal |
Austria Germany Netherlands France Switzerland Belgium |
| Mediterranean | Described as ‘rudimentary’ because they are characterized by their fragmented system of welfare provision consisting of diverse income-maintenance schemes with different levels of provision. Reliance on the family and voluntary sector for services is also prominent |
Spain Italy Greece |
| Social democratic | Characterized by universalism in service provision, generous social transfers, a commitment to full employment and income protection, and a strongly interventionist state. The state is used to promote social equality through a redistributive social-security system |
Sweden Denmark |
| Post-Communist | Formerly Communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe share experiences of the collapse of the universalist Communist welfare state followed by social and economic disruption. In recent years, they have shifted towards marketization and decentralization following examples of Liberal welfare states. State provision of welfare services is minimal |
Czech Republic Poland Slovenia Estonia |
| Liberal | State provision of welfare is aimed at proving a minimal safety net; social-protection levels are modest with strict entitlement criteria and recipients are usually means-tested and stigmatized. Private savings and welfare schemes are encouraged through tax incentives | • England |
Adapted from Vanhoutte, 2012.
Adapted from Esping-Andersen, 1990.
Adapted from Bambra et al., 2009.
Figure 1.Disaggregation of social-protection expenditure into its primary components.
Descriptive statistics of individual-level variables for the analytic sample (n = 8037)
| SHARE | ELSA | Combined | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | Categories | n | % | n | % | n | % |
| Total sample | 6031 | 100 | 2006 | 100 | 8037 | 100.0 | |
| 0 | |||||||
| Route of exit from work | Old-age pension | 2952 | 49.0 | 601 | 30.0 | 3553 | 44.2 |
| Disability pension | 268 | 4.4 | 123 | 6.1 | 391 | 4.9 | |
| Unemployment benefit | 314 | 5.2 | 25 | 1.3 | 339 | 4.2 | |
| Sickness benefit | 106 | 1.8 | 6 | 0.3 | 112 | 1.4 | |
| Social Assistance | 34 | 0.6 | 6 | 0.3 | 40 | 0.5 | |
| Early-retirement pension | 590 | 9.8 | 0 | 0.0 | 590 | 7.3 | |
| None | 1767 | 29.3 | 1245 | 62.0 | 3012 | 37.5 | |
| Age at exit from work | >1 year before pensionable age | 2631 | 43.6 | 1332 | 66.4 | 3963 | 49.3 |
| Pensionable age ±1 year | 1799 | 29.8 | 347 | 17.3 | 2146 | 26.7 | |
| >1 year after pensionable age | 1601 | 26.6 | 327 | 16.3 | 1928 | 24.0 | |
| Country-specific quartile of household wealth | 1 (poorest) | 1090 | 18.0 | 228 | 11.4 | 1318 | 16.4 |
| 2 | 1374 | 22.8 | 438 | 21.8 | 1812 | 22.6 | |
| 3 | 1742 | 28.9 | 618 | 30.8 | 2360 | 29.4 | |
| 4 (wealthiest) | 1825 | 30.3 | 722 | 36.0 | 2547 | 31.7 | |
| Participation in activities | Yes | 3108 | 51.5 | 1104 | 55.0 | 4212 | 52.4 |
| No | 2923 | 48.5 | 902 | 45.0 | 3825 | 47.6 | |
| Partnership status | Married | 4957 | 82.2 | 1241 | 61.9 | 6198 | 77.1 |
| Other | 1434 | 23.8 | 405 | 20.2 | 1839 | 22.9 | |
| Born abroad | Yes | 5537 | 91.8 | 1893 | 94.4 | 7430 | 92.4 |
| No | 494 | 8.2 | 113 | 5.6 | 607 | 7.6 | |
| Gender | Male | 2900 | 48.0 | 938 | 46.8 | 3838 | 47.8 |
| Female | 3131 | 52.0 | 1068 | 53.2 | 4199 | 52.3 | |
| Country | Austria | 409 | 6.8 | 409 | 5.1 | ||
| Germany | 354 | 5.9 | 354 | 4.4 | |||
| Sweden | 528 | 8.8 | 528 | 6.6 | |||
| Netherlands | 559 | 9.3 | 559 | 7.0 | |||
| Spain | 364 | 6.0 | 364 | 4.5 | |||
| Italy | 340 | 5.6 | 340 | 4.2 | |||
| France | 533 | 8.8 | 533 | 6.6 | |||
| Denmark | 512 | 8.5 | 512 | 6.4 | |||
| Greece | 62 | 1.0 | 62 | 0.8 | |||
| Switzerland | 418 | 6.9 | 418 | 5.2 | |||
| Belgium | 653 | 10.8 | 653 | 8.1 | |||
| Czech Republic | 494 | 8.2 | 494 | 6.2 | |||
| Poland | 233 | 3.9 | 233 | 2.9 | |||
| Slovenia | 140 | 2.3 | 140 | 1.7 | |||
| Estonia | 432 | 7.2 | 432 | 5.4 | |||
| England | 2006 | 100.00 | 2006 | 25.0 | |||
| Year of exit event | 2003 | 0 | 215 | 10.7 | 215 | 2.7 | |
| 2004 | 85 | 1.4 | 152 | 7.6 | 237 | 3.0 | |
| 2005 | 516 | 8.6 | 184 | 9.2 | 700 | 8.7 | |
| 2006 | 352 | 5.8 | 153 | 7.6 | 505 | 6.3 | |
| 2007 | 50 | 0.8 | 154 | 7.7 | 204 | 2.6 | |
| 2008 | 0 | 141 | 7.0 | 141 | 1.8 | ||
| 2009 | 1428 | 23.7 | 288 | 14.4 | 1716 | 21.4 | |
| 2010 | 417 | 6.9 | 250 | 12.5 | 667 | 8.3 | |
| 2011 | 754 | 12.5 | 340 | 17.0 | 1094 | 13.6 | |
| 2012 | 1975 | 32.8 | 129 | 6.4 | 2104 | 26.2 | |
| 2013 | 454 | 7.5 | 0 | 454 | 5.7 | ||
| Median | Median | Median | |||||
| Household income | EUR, 2011 PPPs | 17 772 | 18 419 | 17 954 | |||
| Frailty index | 0.054 | 0.054 | 0.054 | ||||
Results of a multilevel MCMC model for individual-level determinants of change in wellbeing scores between baseline and follow-up post labour-market exit (t0 to t1) in the SHARE and ELSA combined sample (n = 8037)
| Combined sample | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | Categories | Coefficient (95% credible interval) |
|
| Route of exit from work | Old-age pension | Ref. | |
| Disability pension | –1.45 (–1.93, –0.96) | <0.001 | |
| Unemployment benefit | –1.08 (–1.61, –0.55) | <0.001 | |
| Sickness benefit | –2.07 (–2.92, –1.23) | <0.001 | |
| Social assistance | –1.28 (–2.67, 0.12) | 0.036 | |
| Early-retirement pension | 0.54 (0.12, 0.97) | 0.006 | |
| None | –0.21 (–0.45, 0.03) | 0.042 | |
| Age at exit from work | >1 year before pensionable age | –0.33 (–0.58, –0.07) | 0.006 |
| Pensionable age ±1 year | Ref. | ||
| >1 year after pensionable age | –0.44 (–0.71, –0.17) | 0.001 | |
| Country-specific quartile of household net worth | 1 (poorest) | Ref. | |
| 2 | 0.85 (0.53, 1.17) | <0.001 | |
| 3 | 1.06 (0.75, 1.37) | <0.001 | |
| 4 (wealthiest) | 1.38 (1.07, 1.70) | <0.001 | |
| Household income | Logged equivalized income | 0.26 (0.14, 0.38) | <0.001 |
| Frailty index | Frailty Index | –6.13 (–7.40, –4.86) | <0.001 |
| Participation in social activities | Never | Ref. | |
| Yes | 0.85 (0.64, 1.05) | <0.001 | |
| Partnership status | Partnered | Ref. | |
| Non-partnered | –0.26 (–0.49, –0.02) | 0.017 | |
| Born abroad | No | Ref. | |
| Yes | –0.27 (–0.65, 0.10) | 0.075 | |
| Year of exit event | 2003 | 0.28 (–0.39, 0.95) | 0.210 |
| 2004 | 0.23 (–0.40, 0.85) | 0.237 | |
| 2005 | –0.63 (–1.07, –0.20) | 0.002 | |
| 2006 | –0.43 (–0.90, 0.04) | 0.037 | |
| 2007 | –0.70 (–1.37, –0.04) | 0.019 | |
| 2008 | –0.26 (–1.05, 0.52) | 0.255 | |
| 2009 | –0.30 (–0.64, 0.04) | 0.044 | |
| 2010 | –0.24 (–0.66, 0.19) | 0.134 | |
| 2011 | Ref. | ||
| 2012 | –0.16 (–0.49, 0.18) | 0.182 | |
| 2013 | 0.40 (–0.09, 0.89) | 0.055 | |
| Random-effects parameters | |||
| Country | 1.13 (0.48, 2.46) | ||
| Individual | 19.17 (18.58, 19.77) | ||
Associations of welfare-state regime and country-level measures of welfare effort, emphasis and expenditure with change in CASP-12 scores following work exit and proportion of between-country differences explained
| Welfare regime | Effort | Emphasis | Expenditure | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | Model 5 | Model 6 | Model 7 |
| Welfare typology | |||||||
| Bismarckian | Ref. | ||||||
| Mediterranean | –2.15 (–3.23, –1.06) | ||||||
| Social democratic | 0.21 (–0.98, 1.43) | ||||||
| Post-communist | –0.85 (–1.81, 0.15) | ||||||
| Liberal | –0.76 (–2.37, 0.78) | ||||||
| Social-protection spending | |||||||
| Total public (% GDP) | 0.01 (–0.10, 0.10) | ||||||
| In-kind benefits (% GDP) | 0.12 (–0.08, 0.31) | ||||||
| Cash benefits (% GDP) | –0.07 (–0.19, 0.05) | ||||||
| In-kind benefits (% public) | 0.05 (–0.01, 0.10) | ||||||
| Total public (EUR 000s) | 0.27 (0.02, 0.53) | ||||||
| In-kind benefits (EUR 000s) | 0.47 (–0.05, 0.97) | ||||||
| Cash benefits (EUR 000s) | 0.06 (–0.36, 0.52) | ||||||
| In-kind health benefits (EUR 000s) | –0.15 (–1.43, 1.03) | ||||||
| Other in-kind benefits (EUR 000s) | 0.93 (0.00, 2.07) | ||||||
| Old-age cash benefits (EUR 000s) | 0.34 (–0.53, 1.41) | ||||||
| Working-age cash benefits (EUR 000s) | 0.13 (–0.76, 1.00) | ||||||
| Country-level variance | 0.51 | 1.18 | 1.01 | 0.96 | 1.00 | 0.93 | 1.31 |
| Individual-level variance | 19.17 | 19.18 | 19.17 | 19.18 | 19.15 | 19.17 | 19.17 |
| Percent country-level variance | 2.57 | 5.78 | 4.99 | 4.77 | 4.96 | 4.62 | 6.38 |
| Percent explained (vs null) | 62.11 | 14.76 | 26.53 | 29.66 | 26.86 | 31.96 | 5.99 |
Independent effects of country-level welfare-state variables after full adjustment for individual-level variables: route of exit from work, age at exit from work, country-specific quartile of household net worth, logarithm of household income, frailty index, participation in social activities, partnership status, born abroad, year of exit event and CASP-12 at t0.
p < 0.001; *p < 0.05.
Figure 2.Random intercepts residual plots for level-2 units without adjustment for country-level variables (top, minimally adjusted) and after adjustment for welfare-state regime (bottom, Model 1) showing deviations from the overall mean.