Literature DB >> 8056951

The relationship between retirement life cycle changes and older men's labor force participation rates.

M D Hayward1, E M Crimmins, L A Wray.   

Abstract

This study probes the utility of older men's labor force participation rates (LFPRs) as indicators of the work-to-retirement transition. Specific attention is directed at how shifts in the retirement life cycle are related to LFPRs. Based on Current Population Survey data for the 1970s, a life table modeling approach showed that LFPRs are relatively weak indicators of the work-to-retirement transition. This was demonstrated by the relative stability in older men's age profiles of LFPRs despite significant changes in the timing and "organization" of the work-to-retirement transition. The 1970s evidenced a contraction of the main career and the expansion of both post-retirement work activity and retirement, yet none of these changes substantially altered the age profiles of older men's labor force participation rates.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8056951     DOI: 10.1093/geronj/49.5.s219

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gerontol        ISSN: 0022-1422


  2 in total

1.  The Retirement Life Course in America at the Dawn of the Twenty-First Century.

Authors:  David F Warner; Mark D Hayward; Melissa A Hardy
Journal:  Popul Res Policy Rev       Date:  2010-01-12

2.  Africans and the myth of rural retirement in South Africa, ca 1900-1950.

Authors:  Aran S MacKinnon
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  2007-10-16
  2 in total

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