The Power of Working Longer

Year of Publication
2018
Author
Series Title
NBER Working Paper Series
Document Number
WP 24226
Report Number
08982937
Institution
National Bureau of Economic Research
City
Cambridge, MA
Abstract

This paper compares the relative strengths of working longer vs. saving more in terms of increasing a household’s affordable, sustainable standard of living in retirement. Both stylized households and actual households from the Health and Retirement Study are examined. We assume that workers commence Social Security benefits when they retire. The basic result is that delaying retirement by 3-6 months has the same impact on the retirement standard of living as saving an additional one-percentage point of labor earnings for 30 years. The relative power of saving more is even lower if the decision to increase saving is made later in the work life. For instance, increasing retirement saving by one percentage point ten years before retirement has the same impact on the sustainable retirement standard of living as working a single month longer. The calculations of the relative power of working longer and saving more are done for a wide range of realized rates of returns on saving, for households with different income levels, and for singles as well as married couples. The results are quite invariant to these circumstances.

Date Published
01/2018
URL
http://www.nber.org/papers/w24226.pdf
DOI
10.3386/w24226
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