Kevin Whitman
Social Security Administration
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kevin Whitman.
Research on Aging | 2009
Christopher R. Tamborini; Howard M. Iams; Kevin Whitman
Large-scale changes in American family structures over the past decades have important implications for the retirement experiences of women. In this study, the authors use a restricted-use file of the Marital History Module of the U.S. Census Bureaus Survey of Income and Program Participation to investigate changes in the marital histories of women aged 40 to 69 years between 1990 and 2004, with a focus on outcomes relevant for Social Security spouse and widow benefit eligibility. Multinomial and binary logistic regression analyses show significant changes in womens marital patterns since 1990, with more substantial shifts occurring among recent cohorts. Due to downward trends in marriage, the authors find a modest decline in Social Security spouse and widow benefit eligibility in 2004, particularly among Black women born toward the end of the baby boom generation.
Journal of Women & Aging | 2010
Christopher R. Tamborini; Kevin Whitman
A number of alternatives to Social Securitys auxiliary benefit system have been proposed in the context of changes in American family and work patterns. This article focuses on one modification therein—lowering the 10-year duration-of-marriage requirement for divorced spouses. Using a powerful microsimulation model (MINT), we examine the distributional effects of extending spouse and survivor benefit eligibility to 5- and 7-year marriages ending in divorce among female retirees in 2030, a population largely comprised of baby boomers. Results show that the options would increase benefits for a small share of female retirees, around 2 to 4%, and would not affect the vast majority of low-income divorced older women. However, of those affected, the options would substantially increase benefits and lower incidence of poverty and near poor. Low-income divorced retirees with marriages between 5 and 9 years in length and a deceased former spouse face the greatest potential gains.
Archive | 2011
Anya Olsen; Kevin Whitman
Minority groups, particularly Hispanics and Blacks, are less likely to use formal financial advice compared to their White counterparts and have lower levels of financial literacy on average. This gap in literacy may have important implications for savings, investing, and retirement planning. To better reach these groups and improve financial literacy, the literature recommends making access to financial education easier, targeting the education to the population, and delivering it through preferred methods. Although they have not been thoroughly evaluated for effectiveness, this chapter provides an overview of several promising, real-world financial education initiatives targeted toward minority populations.
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2012
Melissa A. Z. Knoll; Christopher R. Tamborini; Kevin Whitman
Social Security Bulletin | 2008
Christopher R. Tamborini; Kevin Whitman
Social Security Bulletin | 2011
Kevin Whitman; Gayle L. Reznik; Dave Shoffner
Social Security Bulletin | 2012
Nolan Smith-Kaprosy; Patricia P. Martin; Kevin Whitman
Social Security Bulletin | 2008
Kevin Whitman
Archive | 2012
Amy Dunaway-Knight; Melissa A. Z. Knoll; Dave Shoffner; Kevin Whitman
Archive | 2011
Kevin Whitman; Dave Shoffner