HRS Bibliography

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Bound J, Stinebrickner TR, Waidmann TA. Using a Structural Retirement Model to Simulate the Effect of Changes to the OASDI and Medicare Programs. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan; 2005.
Sakshaug JW, Weir DR, Nicholas LHersch. Validating Diabetes Disease Status in Claims and Survey Data. Proceedings of the 2010 International Methodology Symposium: The Interplay among Censuses, Surveys and Administrative Data. Ottawa; 2010.
Bhattacharya J, Schoenbaum M. The Value of the Medicare Benefit for Social Security Disability Insurance Recipients and Applicants. Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation; 2002.
Laitner J, House CL, Stolyarov D. Valuing Lost Home Production in Dual-Earner Couples. Ann Arbor, MI: The University of Michigan, Michigan Retirement Research Center; 2005.
Deshpande SK, Bai R, Balocchi C, Starling JE, Weiss J. VC-BART: Bayesian trees for varying coefficients. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University; 2020.
Stango V, Zinman J. We are all Behavioral, More or Less: A Taxonomy of Consumer Decision Making. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research; 2020. doi:10.3386/w28138.
Ameriks J, Caplin A, Lee M, Shapiro MD, Tonetti C. The Wealth of Wealthholders. Cambridge, United States, NBER Working Paper No. 20972; 2015.
Schwandt H. Wealth Shocks and Health Outcomes: Evidence from Stock Market Fluctuations. Bonn, Germany, Institute for the Study of Labor; 2014.
Sevak P. Wealth Shocks and Retirement Timing: Evidence from the Nineties. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan; 2002.
Goda GShah, Streeter JL. Wealth Trajectories Across Key Milestones: Longitudinal Evidence from Life-Course Transitions. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research; 2021. doi:10.3386/w28329.
Goda GShah, Streeter JL. Wealth Trajectories Across Key Milestones: Longitudinal Evidence from Life-Course Transitions. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research; 2021. doi:10.3386/w28329.
Summer L, Shirey L. What Benefits Do Young Retirees and Older Workers Receive?. Washington, DC, National Academy on an Aging Society; 2001.
Summer L, Shirey L. What Benefits Do Young Retirees and Older Workers Receive?. Washington, DC, National Academy on an Aging Society; 2001.
Munnell AH, Sanzenbacher GT, Rutledge MS. What Causes Workers to Retire Before They Plan?. Boston, Boston College; 2015.
Friedberg L, Sun W, Webb A. What Effect Do Time Constraints Have on the Age of Retirement?. Boston: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2008.
Calvo E, Haverstick K, Sass SA. What Makes Retirees Happier: A Gradual or 'Cold Turkey' Retirement?. Chestnut Hill, MA, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2007.
Gustman AL, Steinmeier TL, Tabatabai N. What the Stock Market Decline Means for the Financial Security and Retirement Choices of the Near-Retirement Population. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research ; 2009. doi:10.3386/w15435.
Chan S, Stevens AH. What You Don't Know Can't Help You: Knowledge and Retirement Decision Making. Cambridge, Mass., National Bureau of Economic Research; 2003.
Sass SA, Sun W, Webb A. When Should Married Men Claim Social Security Benefits?. Boston: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2008.
Sass SA, Sun W, Webb A. When Should Married Men Claim Social Security Benefits?. Boston: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2008.
Shen K. Who benefits from public financing of home care for low-income seniors?. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University; 2020.
Hou W, Munnell AH, Li Y, Sanzenbacher GT. Why Are U.S. Households Claiming Social Security Later?. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2017.
Webb A, Sun W, Sass SA. Why Do Married Men Claim Social Security Benefits So Early? Ignorance or Caddishness?. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2007.
Webb A, Sun W, Sass SA. Why Do Married Men Claim Social Security Benefits So Early? Ignorance or Caddishness?. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2007.
Munnell AH, Soto M. Why Do Women Claim Social Security Benefits So Early?. Boston College, Center for Retirement Research; 2005.