Economists say Economic Crisis will cause
more Retirements
Newswise — When the stock market and the
housing market plummeted, many thought that
decimated retirement accounts and lower home
equity would force older workers to delay
retirement. Instead, the economy may
actually force many into retirement.
Wellesley College economists Courtney Coile
and Phillip Levine have published a new
paper, “The Market Crash and Mass Layoffs:
How the Current Economic Crisis May Affect
Retirement,” this month through the National
Bureau of Economic Research.
The study is the subject of a story, “Gulf
Between Rich and Poor
Seniors Could Widen,” in Forbes Magazine.
“With the unemployment rate nearing 10
percent, some older workers may lose their
jobs and be forced to retire earlier than
expected,” Coile said.
The findings suggest that more people will
retire early due to the rising unemployment
rate than will delay retirement due to lost
retirement savings resulting from the stock
market crash.
“In fact, we predict that the increase in
retirement brought about by the weak labor
market will be about 50 percent larger than
the decrease in retirement brought about by
falling equity markets,” Coile said.
This runs counter to the perception, evident
in dozens of stories in the press over the
past year, that the main effect of the
current economic crisis on retirement will
be retirement delays.
“If anything, this understates the problem
because different types of workers are
affected by these market conditions,” Levine
said. “Lower income workers are the ones who
will be more likely to lose their jobs and
be forced into retirement sooner. Higher
income workers are the ones who will suffer
stock losses and who may choose to work
longer. In terms of their well-being in
retirement, it is the low-income workers
will be hurt more.”
The paper uses 30 years of data from the
March Current Population Survey to estimate
models relating retirement decisions to
fluctuations in equity, housing, and labor
markets.
Coile and Levine continue to investigate
this issue, focusing on its impact on the
well-being of individuals in their 70s, well
after they have left the labor force. They
are incorporating their work in a book,
Reconsidering Retirement: How Losses and
Layoffs Affect Older Workers, soon to be
published by Brookings Press.
Since 1875, Wellesley College has been a
leader in providing an excellent liberal
arts education for women who will make a
difference in the world. Its 500-acre campus
near Boston is home to 2,300 undergraduate
students from all 50 states and 68
countries. For more information, go to
www.wellesley.edu.