早期婴儿潮一代的退休模式是否出现了性别差异?

K. Cahill, Michael D. Giandrea, J. Quinn
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引用次数: 10

摘要

在过去二十年的大部分时间里,美国男性和女性的退休模式都很相似。这段关系要结束了吗?最近的研究表明,出生在1948年至1953年之间的“早期婴儿潮一代”的退休模式与之前的同龄人有所不同。在经历了近20年的相似之后,职业男性和女性退出劳动力市场的方式似乎也出现了性别差异。本文详细探讨了这些性别差异,以帮助确定我们是否正在目睹趋势的中断或仅仅是短期事件。我们使用的数据来自于1992年开始的具有全国代表性的纵向健康与退休研究(HRS)的三组美国老年人。我们按性别探讨晚年发生的工作转变类型,并特别探讨四个潜在相关决定因素的作用:受抚养子女的存在;需要照顾协助的父母;职业岗位上的职业地位;和自我雇佣状态。我们发现,在其他条件相同的情况下,在职业男性和女性中,照顾孩子和父母并不是早期婴儿潮一代退休过渡的重要驱动因素。因此,在这些特征方面可能存在的性别差异不太可能导致在退休模式方面持续存在性别差异。相比之下,自雇仍然是过渡性工作过渡和分阶段退休的统计上重要的决定因素。这一发现,再加上男性比女性更有可能在以后的生活中自主创业,可能会导致未来性别之间的一些差异,尽管考虑到大多数老年员工都从事领薪工作,这种影响可能有限。年长的美国人——包括男性和女性——正在通过推迟工作和逐渐退出劳动力市场来应对他们的经济环境。虽然这些决定的一些决定因素可能对男女产生不同的影响,但早期婴儿潮一代退休模式方面的性别差异似乎是更广泛的宏观经济力量的结果。迄今为止的证据表明,随着经济复苏,性别差异可能会消失。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are Gender Differences Emerging in the Retirement Patterns of the Early Boomers?
Controlling for career employment later in life, the retirement patterns of men and women in America have resembled one another for much of the past two decades. Is this relationship coming to an end? Recent research suggests that the retirement patterns of the Early Boomers – those born between 1948 and 1953 – have diverged from those of earlier cohorts. Gender differences appear to be emerging as well in the way that career men and women exit the labor force, after nearly two decades of similarities. This paper explores these gender differences in detail to help determine whether we are witnessing a break in trend or merely a short-term occurrence. We use data on three cohorts of older Americans from the nationally-representative, longitudinal Health and Retirement Study (HRS) that began in 1992. We explore by gender the types of job transitions that occur later in life and explore, in particular, the role of four potentially relevant determinants: the presence of dependent children; a parent in need of caregiving assistance; occupational status on the career job; and self-employment status. We find that, among career men and women, child and parental caregiving are not significant drivers of the retirement transitions of the Early Boomers, all else equal. Gender differences that may exist with respect to these characteristics are therefore unlikely to lead to persistent gender differences in retirement patterns. In contrast, self employment continues to be a statistically significant determinant of bridge job transitions and phased retirement. This finding, combined with the fact that men are much more likely than women to be self employed later in life, could lead to some differences by gender going forward, though the impact is likely to be limited given that the large majority of older workers are in wage-and-salary employment. Older Americans – both men and women – are responding to their economic environment by working later in life and exiting the labor force gradually. While some determinants of these decisions likely impact men and women differently, gender differences with respect to the retirement patterns of the Early Boomers appear to be the result of broader macroeconomic forces. The evidence to date suggests that gender differences may dissipate as the recovery ensues.
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