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Expectations and Realization of Joint Retirement Among Dual-Worker CouplesUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison
University of Wisconsin-Madison Using data from the first seven waves of the Health and Retirement Study (1992 to 2004), the authors examined the extent to which joint retirement expectations were realized, the role of couple-level agreement in facilitating joint retirement, whether husbands' or wives' expectations were more likely to be realized in cases of disagreement, and factors associated with the realization of expectations. The results indicate that couples expecting joint retirement were over three times more likely to retire jointly than couples in which neither spouse expected to do so. However, the probability of joint retirement did not differ between couples in which both spouses expected to retire jointly and those in which only one spouse expected to do so. Wives' and husbands' expectations were equally strong predictors of joint retirement, and retirement age, health, spouses' relative earnings, and discussions of retirement were related to the likelihood of realizing joint retirement expectations.
Key Words: retirement joint retirement retirement expectations gender
This version was published on March
1, 2009 Research on Aging, Vol. 31, No. 2,
153-179 (2009) |
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