Essays on Retirement and Medicare Policy


Book Description

This dissertation is comprised of three freestanding chapters, each of which studies a policy-motivated question related to the economics of aging. The first two chapters provide new evidence from Denmark on how social security policy impacts retirement, labor supply, and savings decisions of older workers, and the last chapter evaluates a U.S. Medicare policy that aims to improve access to healthcare for older Americans. Chapter 1 studies how the provision of public pension benefits impacts private savings. We use administrative data and a regression discontinuity design to identify the causal effects of a Danish reform that increased social security eligibility ages. We find no evidence of anticipatory savings responses after the announcement of the reform, whereas we find large increases in savings in retirement accounts when delayed benefit eligibility induces extended employment. The evidence suggests inertia is a leading mechanism: individuals continue to work and continue to save, and we show how employer default contribution rate policies mediate responses to the national reform. Chapter 2 studies how social security influences joint retirement of couples. We first document joint retirement behavior around the early pension eligibility age in Denmark: we show that spouses are discontinuously more likely to retire when their partners first become eligible for social security benefits. We then explore underlying mechanisms and find age differences within couples to be crucial determinants of joint retirement behavior, which is primarily driven by older spouses continuing to work until their younger partners reach pension eligibility age. Chapter 3 studies a U.S. Medicare policy that delivers bonus payments to physicians for practicing in areas with few doctors per capita. Using several sources of data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and a matched difference-in-differences design, we find that counties designated as official shortage areas experience an increase in the number of early-career primary care physicians. However, we find no evidence that later-career physicians respond to shortage area designations, and we highlight how targeting bonus payments towards newer physicians may thus improve the effectiveness and cost-efficiency of the policy.




Comparing How Various Nations Administer Retirement Income


Book Description

This book makes an innovative contribution to the field of retirement income security in three distinctive ways. First, it seeks to develop a sophisticated philosophical rationale for the social dimension, in the context of retirement. Such a rationale is frequently implicit in much of the relevant literature, and where explicit, is often crudely developed. Second, it seeks to identify robustly the ways in which specific forms of privatisation promote outcomes that are consistent with the social dimension, whilst acknowledging the possibility of market failure. Third, it seeks to provide an agenda for reform, based on robustly developed normative arguments, and a careful appraisal of the evidence.







Essays on Social Security


Book Description




Three Essays in Public Economics


Book Description

The first and second chapters of this dissertation consider household financial decision making. In the first chapter I examine the phenomenon of early claiming for Social Security retirement benefits. Previous work has shown that early claiming, in particular by the primary earner in married couples, is not consistent with household benefit maximization nor is it predicted by models of utility maximization. I show that observed claiming behavior is explained well by a model in which the primary earner chooses when to claim without taking into consideration the effect of the choice on the secondary earner's spousal and survivor benefits. I find that the decrease in the value of household benefits due to early claiming is borne almost entirely by the surviving spouse. In the second chapter, with John Karl Scholz and Ananth Seshadri, we use the insight of a lifecycle model to better understand the factors that affect household retirement savings targets. Two of the most important determinants of savings targets are households' location in the lifetime income distribution and number of children. We measure the deviation of a set of financial guidelines for retirement saving from the optimal asset accumulation implied by the lifecycle model and suggest an alternate savings heuristic that takes into account insights from the lifecycle model. The third chapter applies a novel estimation strategy to measure the benefit of hazardous waste site remediation. In contrast to previous estimates, this method calculates the benefit of site remediation allowing for diminishing marginal utility. Using data on home sales in Cincinnati, Ohio in 2000 I find the median willingness to pay for a one mile increase to the nearest hazardous waste site is $228 per year. This is lower than previous estimates which range from $284 to $1,065 per year.




Social Security Pension Reform in Europe


Book Description

Social Security in the United States and in Europe is at a critical juncture. Through the essays assembled in Social Security Pension Reform in Europe, Martin Feldstein and Horst Siebert, along with a number of distinguished contributors, discuss the challenges facing Social Security reform in the aging societies of Europe. A remarkable range of European nations—Germany, France, Finland, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Italy, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and Hungary—have implemented or are about to implement mixed Social Security systems that combine a traditional defined benefit of the pay-as-you-go system with an individual retirement account defined contribution of a capital-funded system. The essays here highlight the problems that the European pension reform process faces and how it differs from that of the United States. This timely volume will significantly enrich the debate on pension reform worldwide.