Recessions and retirement: how stock market and labor market fluctuations affect older workers.
Coile, Courtney ; Levine, Phillip B.
The sharp drop in equity values at the beginning of the recent
financial crisis led to widespread concern about the effect of the
crisis on retirement security. With defined contribution pension plans
largely having replaced defined benefit plans for U.S. workers, (1)
millions of individuals experienced deep declines in the value of their
retirement savings. It was widely predicted that workers would delay
retirement to make up for these losses, as newspaper headlines
proclaimed "Economic Crisis Scrambles Retirement Math" and
"Will You Retire? New Economic Realities Keep More Americans in the
Workforce Longer."
The effect of the sharp rise in the unemployment rate on retirement
was a less-publicized element of the crisis. Relative to earlier
periods, workers who lost jobs experienced longer spells of unemployment
and had a lower probability of finding new jobs. (2) Older workers who
experienced job loss and difficulty finding work may have retired
earlier than planned. Indeed, the Social Security Administration
reported in 2009 that new retired worker benefit claims rose by 10
percent more than expected during 2008 and officials surmised that the
weak economy was the cause. (3)
The potential effects of the crisis on retirement are more complex
than suggested by the headlines. In a series of studies, we have
investigated the effect of stock and labor market fluctuations on
retirement decisions and retiree well-being in the United States. This
summary reviews our exploration of whether retirement rates are higher
when stock markets or labor markets are weak. We also describe our
analyses of whether recessions have long-term impacts on retiree income
and health.
Does the Stock Market Affect Retirement?
In order for stock market fluctuations to affect retirement
decisions, several conditions must be met. First, since equity investors
presumably expect a positive rate of return and understand that daily
prices are volatile, there must be asset price movements representing
larger- or smaller-than-expected returns. Second, workers must have
enough stock assets that these price changes constitute meaningful
wealth shocks. Third, retirement rates must be sensitive to fluctuations
in wealth.
The stock market has experienced unusual equity returns over the
past two decades, with two boom-bust cycles, culminating in the dot-com
crash of 20002002 and the more recent financial crisis. Whether workers
have substantial equity investments is a different matter. In one
analysis, we report that 58 percent of U.S. households with a head aged
55 to 64 held stock assets in 2007, just before the recent crisis. (4)
The most common form of ownership is through retirement accounts (50
percent of households), though some households own stocks directly (21
percent) or in mutual funds outside of retirement accounts (14 percent).
Median stock assets are $78,000 among stockholders. Asset ownership and
values are strongly correlated with education. Some 78 percent of
households headed by a college graduate own stock, and the median
holding is $125,000, while just 21 percent of households headed by high
school dropouts hold stock, with a median holding of $10,000. Overall,
nearly six in 10 of near-retirement-age households have less than
$25,000 in stock assets and only one in eight have assets over $250,000.
If workers respond to financial wealth shocks, the stark
differences in stock ownership by education suggest that the impact of
stock market returns on retirement will vary by education. We asked
whether college graduates between the ages of 55 and 70 are more
sensitive to short-term (single year) stock market fluctuations when
making retirement decisions than less educated individuals. (5) When we
analyzed data from the Current Population Survey, 1980-2002, and the
Health and Retirement Study, 1992-2002, we found no evidence of this.
This could be due to the small number of individuals who experienced
large, unexpected wealth gains or losses during this period, or to the
wealth effect being relatively small. We subsequently revisited this
question with more years of data and were able to identify circumstances
in which retirement behavior is responsive to stock market fluctuations.
(6) Specifically, we found that long-term market fluctuations, as
measured by the percent change in the S&P 500 Index over a five- or
10-year period, affect the retirement decisions of college-educated
workers aged 62 to 69. [See Figure 1] We found no statistically
significant effect of short-term fluctuations on retirement behavior,
nor any effect of market fluctuations on younger workers or workers with
less education. The magnitude of the response is economically meaningful
--a one-standard-deviation (77 percentage point) increase in the 10-year
return increases the retirement rate of college graduates by 1.5 points,
or 12 percent relative to the mean.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Overall, the empirical findings suggest that while there are
workers whose retirements are slowed or accelerated when they experience
unexpected changes in stock market returns, the number of workers who
experience substantial wealth shocks is relatively small and the
magnitude of the aggregate retirement response is likely modest.
Therefore, it is unlikely that changes in labor force participation
in the overall population that coincide with stock market upswings or
downturns are retirement responses to the market.
Does the Labor Market Affect Retirement?
The Great Recession has equaled or surpassed recessions of the
1970s and 1980s in terms of the steep rise in unemployment and slow pace
of recovery. While it seems logical that such an event could affect
retirement behavior, the extensive retirement literature offers
surprisingly little guidance on this point. We have explored whether
retirement is cyclically sensitive, using 25 years of Current Population
Survey data. (7) Unlike an analysis of the stock market, a study of the
labor market can take advantage of differences in market conditions
across geographic locations as well as time. We use standard panel data
methods to account for longstanding differences across states and
national trends over time in retirement behavior, essentially asking
whether workers retire earlier when the labor market is weaker in their
geographic area after all other differences are taken into account.
Our central finding is that retirement is cyclically sensitive--a
five-point increase in the unemployment rate raises the probability of
retirement by about one percentage point, or eight percent relative to
the mean annual retirement rate of 13 percent. Moreover, the labor
supply response to unemployment emerges at age 61, as workers approach
the Social Security early retirement age of 62; retirement is not
cyclical for workers age 55 to 60.
In subsequent work, we explore how the cyclicality of retirement
varies with education. (8) We find that workers with a high school
degree experience the largest effect--a five point increase in the
unemployment rate raises their probability of retirement by 1.8
percentage points, or nearly 20 percent relative to the mean. [See
Figure 2] The effects for other education groups are positive but not
statistically significant. In explaining these results, we surmise that
high school dropouts may be most likely to lose a job during a
recession, but also are likely to retire at early ages regardless of
market conditions due to poor health and the inability to continue
working at physically demanding jobs, while more skilled workers may
have a relatively low risk of unemployment during a recession. We think
that "high school graduates may have the right combination of
desire to continue working along with a higher risk of unemployment and
difficulty in finding new work, so a recession may lead many of them to
retire involuntarily." (9) In short, the results suggest that
retirement is cyclically sensitive, particularly for less-educated
workers over the age of 61.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
Do Stock and Labor Markets Affect Retiree Well-Being?
Finally, we turn to the question of whether market fluctuations
have long-term effects on retiree well-being. Here our focus is on labor
market conditions, as the stock market has rebounded from its 2009 low
to values near or above pre-crash levels, while the weakness in the
labor market has been extensive and persistent. A spell of late-career
unemployment can have long-term consequences for an individual even
after the labor market rebounds. If an individual fails to find new
employment, he or she may claim Social Security benefits when first
available at age 62, poten tially years earlier than planned. As
benefits are subject to actuarial adjustment, earlier claiming results
in permanently lower monthly income.
We use data from the American Community Survey to look at the
relationship between the labor market conditions around the time of
62-yearolds' retirements and those individuals' income in
their 70s. (10) As in earlier work, we essentially treat labor market
conditions at retirement as a random draw, asking whether individuals
who approach retirement during a recession have lower retiree income
than other individuals, after controlling for state, year, and age
effects. We find that experiencing a recession in the years leading up
to retirement lowers retiree income. The finding is stronger for Social
Security income, for less-educated workers, and for labor market
conditions experienced at or after age 62.
Of course, income is not the only important measure of well-being.
With coauthor Robin McKnight, we examined the impact of labor market
conditions around the time of retirement on longevity. (11) Individuals
who experience a late-career layoff may face years of reduced employment
and earnings before retiring when they reach Social Security
eligibility. They may also experience lost health insurance and reduced
access to health care until reaching age 65, when Medicare becomes
available. Using 30 years of data from the National Vital Statistics
System, we find that experiencing a recession in one's late 50s
leads to a reduction in longevity. We also establish that reduced
employment, insurance coverage, and health care access are plausible
mechanisms for this effect.
Conclusion
Market fluctuations affect retirement, but the story is
nuanced--weaker long-term stock returns lead moreskilled workers to
delay retirement, while higher unemployment rates lead less-skilled
workers to retire earlier. In one study, we estimated that if the
unusual stock and labor market conditions experienced during the most
recent downturn were to gradually return to normal over a five-year
period, there would be a net increase in retirements of about 120,000,
or 1.2 percent relative to the estimated 10 million workers retiring
during this period. (12) In fact, the stock market has rebounded more
quickly and the labor market more slowly, so the actual net increase in
retirements is likely larger. Moreover, it is less-skilled workers who
bear the brunt of the labor market effects of the crisis, and there
appear to be negative long-term effects of late-career unemployment on
income and health for these individuals. While the recent crisis focused
public attention on retirement security in an age of defined
contribution pension plans, it seems clear that the difficulties facing
individuals who approach retirement at a time when the labor market is
weak merit greater public attention.
Courtney Coile is a research associate in the NBER's Aging
Program and editor of the NBER Bulletin on Aging and Health. She is a
professor of economics at Wellesley College, where she directs the Knapp
Social Science Center and has taught since 2000.
Much of Coile's research focuses on the economics of
retirement. She is a long-time participant in the NBER's Social
Security and Retirement Around the World project and is the co-author of
Reconsidering Retirement: How Losses and Layoffs Affect Older Workers.
She recently served on the National Academy of Sciences' Committee
on the Long-Run Macro-Economic Effects of the Aging U.S. Population
(Phase II) and is an editor for the Journal of Pension Economics and
Finance.
Coile studied economics as an undergraduate at Harvard University
and first worked at the NBER as a research assistant in those years. She
earned her Ph.D. in economics from MIT in 1999.
Coile lives in the Boston suburbs with her husband and two
school-age children. In her free time, she shares her love of baseball,
music, and food with her family and is still working on getting her
children to share her love of running and hiking.
Phil Levine is the Katharine Coman and A. Barton Hepburn professor
of economics at Wellesley College, a research associate at the National
Bureau of Economic Research, and a member of the National Academy of
Social Insurance. He also has served as a senior economist at the White
House Council of Economic Advisers.
Levine received a B.S. degree with honors from Cornell University
in 1985 and a Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1990. He has been a
member of the fac- ulty at Wellesley College since 1991.
His research has largely been devoted to empirical examinations of
the impact of social policy on indi- vidual behavior. Along with many
publications in academic journals and edited volumes, he is the author
of Sex and Consequences: Abortion, Public Policy, and the Economics of
Fertility, coauthor of Reconsidering Retirement: How Losses and Layoffs
Affect Older Workers, and co-editor of Targeting Investments in
Children: Fighting Poverty When Resources are Limited.
Levine lives in Newton with his wife, Heidi. His two college- age
children, Jake and Noah, cur- rently attend Brown University and
Middlebury College. Outside of work, he is a huge baseball fan and
particularly enjoys watching both of his sons play.
(1) J. Poterba, S. Venti, and D. Wise, "The Changing Landscape
of Pensions in the United States" NBER Working Paper No. 13381,
October 2007. Return to text
(2) H. Farber, "Job Loss in the Great Recession: Historical
Perspective from the Displaced Worker Survey, 19842010" NBER
Working Paper No. 17040, May 2011. Return to text
(3) S. C. Goss, Applications for Social Security Retirement Worker
Benefits in Fiscal Year 2009, Washington, D.C.: Social Security
Administration, Office of the Chief Actuary, 2009. Return to text
(4) C. Coile and P Levine, Reconsidering Retirement: How Losses and
Layoffs Affect Older Workers, Washington D.C.: Brookings Institution
Press, 2010. Return to text
(5) C. Coile and P Levine, "Bulls, Bears, and Retirement
Behavior" NBER Working Paper No. 10779, September 2004, and
Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 59(3), 2006, pp. 408-29. Return
to text
(6) C. Coile and P Levine, "The Market Crash and Mass Layoffs:
How the Current Economic Crisis May Affect Retirement," NBER
Working Paper No. 15395, October 2009, and The B.E. Press Journal of
Economic Analysis and Policy, 11(1), ISSN(Online) 1935-1682, 2011.
Return to text
(7) C. Coile and P Levine, "Labor Market Shocks and
Retirement: Do Government Programs Matter ?" NBER Working Paper No.
12559, October 2006, and Journal of Public Economics, 91(10), 2007, pp.
1902-19. Return to text
(8) C. Coile and P Levine, "The Market Crash and Mass Layoffs:
How the Current Economic Crisis May Affect Retirement," NBER
Working Paper No. 15395, October 2009, and The B.E. Press Journal of
Economic Analysis and Policy, 11(1), ISSN (Online) Article 22, 2011.
Return to text
(9) C. Coile and P Levine, Reconsidering Retirement: How Losses and
Layoffs Affect Older Workers, Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution
Press, 2010. Return to text
(10) C. Coile and P Levine, "Recessions, Reeling Markets, and
Retiree WellBeing," NBER Working Paper No. 16066, June 2010, and
American Economic Review: Papers & Proceedings, 101(3), 2011, pp.
23-28, (published as "Recessions, Retirement, and Social
Security") Return to text
(11) C. Coile, P Levine, and R. McKnight, "Recessions, Older
Workers, and Longevity: How Long Are Recessions Good for Your Health
NBER Working Paper No. 18361, September 2012, and American Economic
Journal: Economic Policy, 6(3), 2014, pp. 92-119. Return to text
(12) C. Coile and P Levine, "The Market Crash and Mass
Layoffs: How the Current Economic Crisis May Affect Retirement,"
NBER Working Paper No. 15395, October 2009, and The B.E. Press Journal
of Economic Analysis and Policy, 11(1), ISSN (Online) Article 22, 2011.
Return to text