Teaching, Teachers Pensions and Retirement across Recent Cohorts of College Graduate Women

TitleTeaching, Teachers Pensions and Retirement across Recent Cohorts of College Graduate Women
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsFitzpatrick, MD
InstitutionNational Bureau of Economic Research
KeywordsPension, Teacher Pensions, women
Abstract

Labor force participation rates of college-educated women ages 60 to 64 increased by 20 percent (10 percentage points) between 2000 and 2010. One potential explanation for this change stems from the fact that fewer college-educated women in the more recent cohorts were ever teachers. This occupational shift could affect the length of women’s careers because teaching is a profession where workers are covered by defined benefit pensions and, generally, defined benefit pensions allow workers to retire earlier than Social Security. I provide evidence supporting the hypothesis and show that older college-educated women who worked as teachers do not experience increases in labor force participation as large as their counterparts who never taught.

URLhttp://www.nber.org/papers/w22698
DOI10.3386/w22698
Citation KeyNBERw22698