HRS Bibliography
Export 265 results:
Filters: First Letter Of Title is W [Clear All Filters]
Report
Why do couples and singles save during retirement?. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research; 2021. doi:10.3386/w28828.
. Why Do Late Boomers Have So Little Retirement Wealth?. Boston: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College ; 2020.
. Why Do Life Insurance Policyholders Lapse? The Roles of Income, Health and Bequest Motive Shocks. National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc, NBER Working Papers: 17899; 2012.
. Why Do Life Insurance Policyholders Lapse? The Roles of Income, Health and Bequest Motive Shocks. New Haven, Yale University; 2010.
. Why Do Married Men Claim Social Security Benefits So Early? Ignorance or Caddishness?. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2007.
. Why Do Women Claim Social Security Benefits So Early?. Boston College, Center for Retirement Research; 2005.
. Why Does Consumption Fluctuate in Old Age and How Should the Government Insure It?. Cambridge: The National Bureau of Economic Research; 2020.
. Why Does Consumption Fluctuate in Old Age and How Should the Government Insure it?. Minneapolis, MN: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis; 2020. doi:https://doi.org/10.21034/iwp.40.
. Why Does the Importance of Education for Health Differ across the United States?. American Sociological Association; 2020.
. Why Has Poverty Declined for Widows?. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2019.
. Why Researchers Now Rely on Surveys for Race Data on OASDI and SSI Programs: A Comparison of Four Major Surveys. Washington, DC, Social Security Administration; 2016.
. Why Some Workers Remain in the Labor Force Beyond the Typical Age of Retirement. Boston: Boston College Center for Retirement Research; 2001.
. Why There Are Differences in Retirement Income by Race in America. Watson Wyatt Worldwide; 1998.
. Widowhood, Divorce and Loss of Health Insurance Among Near-Elderly Women: Evidence from the Health and Retirement Study. Ann Arbor, MI: Michigan Retirement Research Center, University of Michigan; 2003.
. Will Fewer Children Boost Demand for Formal Caregiving?. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2019.
. Will Survivors of the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic Have Lower Mortality?. Newton, MA: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2022.
. Will the Average Retirement Age Continue to Increase?. Boston, MA, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2015.
. Women Working Longer: Facts and Some Explanations. Cambridge: The National Bureau of Economic Research; 2016. doi:10.3386/w22607.
. Work Ability and the Social Insurance Safety Net in the Years Prior to Retirement. The Urban Institute; 2010.
. . Work and Retirement Patterns for the G.I. Generation, Silent Generation, and Early Boomers: Thirty Years of Change. Boston: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College; 2010.
. Work Disability Among Non-Elderly Adult Males: The United States, 1893-2001. Brigham Young University; 2003.
. Work Disability is a Pain in the , Especially in England, The Netherlands, and the United States. RAND Labor and Population Program; 2005.
. Workers Who Take Early Social Security Retirement Benefits. Washington, DC, RAND Labor and Population Program; Prepared for the Social Security Administration; 2002.
. Working and disability expectancies at old ages: The role of childhood circumstances and education. Rostock, Germany: Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research; 2020. doi:10.4054/MPIDR-WP-2020-006.
.