Archive | 2019

Familial Caregiving and Timing of Retirement: A Gendered Cohort Analysis

 

Abstract


Familial Caregiving and Timing of Retirement: A Gendered Cohort Analysis Rachel R. Stoiko, M.S. Retirement timing has been linked to a host of outcomes for individuals, families, and communities. Well-known predictors of retirement timing include health, wealth, and cognitive capacity; a few studies have also linked gender and family caregiving to retirement timing. In the present study, data from the Health and Retirement Study were used to create profiles of pre-retirement family caregiving (operationalized as time and financial transfers to participants’ aging parents and adult children). These profiles, as well as participant gender and cohort, were used to predict later retirement timing. All profiles retired, on average, earlier than their full eligibility for Social Security benefits. The Eldercare profile, which was characterized by high levels of time and financial transfers to aging parents, retired the earliest. On average, women retired earlier than men. Members of the War Babies cohort (b. 1941-1947) retired earlier than members of the HRS cohort (b. 1931-1941). There was not a significant interaction between caregiving profile and gender, revealing that when men enacted female-typical caregiving roles, their retirement timing resembled women’s. Implications for individual retirement decision-making and policy are discussed. FAMILIAL CAREGIVING AND TIMING OF RETIREMENT iii Table of

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.33915/etd.6731
Language English
Journal None

Full Text