HRS Bibliography

Bibliography Search
Export 37 results:
Filters: Keyword is Social Security and First Letter Of Last Name is M  [Clear All Filters]

M

Moulton JG. Cohort Based Analysis of Income Shocks Over the Life Cycle. 2011;Ph.D.:141.
Moulton JG, Stevens AH. Reconsidering the social security notch and retirement: Wealth and incentive effects. Economics Letters. 2015;132:65-68. doi:10.1016/j.econlet.2015.04.016.
Mukherjee A. Intergenerational Altruism and Retirement Transfers: Evidence from the Social Security Notch. The Journal of Human Resources. 2020. doi:10.3368/jhr.58.1.0419-10140R3.
Munnell AH, Meme KB, Jivan NA, Cahill KE. Should We Raise Social Security's Earliest Eligibility Age?. Boston: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2004.
Munnell AH, Soto M. Why Do Women Claim Social Security Benefits So Early?. Boston College, Center for Retirement Research; 2005.
Munnell AH. Yes, it's true: Older people depend on Social Security. Marketwatch.
Munnell AH, Golub-Sass A, Karamcheva NS. Strange But True: Claim Social Security Now, Claim More Later. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2009.
Munnell AH. What Factors Explain the Decline in Widows' Poverty? . Boston, MA: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2018:2-21.
Munnell AH, Soto M. How Much Pre-Retirement Income Does Social Security Replace?. Boston: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2005.
Munnell AH, Golub-Sass A, Karamcheva NS. Strange But True: Free Loan from Social Security. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2009.
Munnell AH, Sass SA, Golub-Sass A, Karamcheva NS. Unusual Social Security Claiming Strategies: Costs and Distributional Effects. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2009.
Munnell AH, Golub-Sass A, Karamcheva NS. Strange But True: Claim and Suspend Social Security. Boston: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2009.