Raising the
retirement1 age to increase financial stability does not make men worse off psychologically in the long-run, according to a new study by Dr. Elizabeth Mokyr Horner, from the University of California, Berkeley in the US. Her work shows that individuals go through the same psychological stages as they adjust to retirement, with life satisfaction
stabilizing2 after 70, irrespective of how old they are when they retire. The study is published online in Springer's Journal of Happiness Studies.
As we live longer, the size of the
retired3 population relative to that of tax payers is growing, creating mounting costs with
dwindling4(减少) resources. Despite country variation in public pension programs and retirement age regimes, the vast majority of current social security programs are financially
unstable5. As a result, several countries have been
steadily6 raising their retirement age.
Dr. Mokyr Horner's work investigates the relationship between retirement and happiness in individuals near retirement and afterwards. She
analyzed7 international data from the 2006 Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe for 14 EU countries, the 2006 English Longitudinal Study of Ageing in the UK and the 2004 Health and Retirement Study for the US. The data covered a total of 18,345
fully8 retired men
aged9 between 50-70 years. The researcher was particularly interested in how satisfied they were with their lives at different time points after retirement.
In the time surrounding retirement, the men experienced a large improvement in
well-being10 and life satisfaction. A few years after retirement, however, levels of happiness fell rapidly. This happened irrespective of how old men were when they retired. In the long-run i.e. post 70 years, happiness levels
stabilized11 for all.
Dr. Mokyr Horner concludes: "A later formal retirement simply delays the well-being benefits of retirement in men, and age of formal retirement is
relatively12 neutral with regard to overall happiness. Given the growing
fiscal13 pressures to adjust the age of retirement
upwards14, it can be inferred from my studies that well-being may be, on balance,
affected15 only marginally -- if at all -- by such changes."