职业选择、退休和残疾保险的影响

Lindsay Jacobs
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引用次数: 5

摘要

不同职业对身体的要求存在很大差异,这导致了晚年生产力、残疾风险和社会保障残疾保险(SSDI)价值的巨大差异。在本文中,我研究了不同职业之间的这种差异如何影响最初的职业选择,以及SSDI在多大程度上促使更多的人选择体力强度高的职业。SSDI保证了残疾对生产力的冲击。利用健康与退休研究(HRS)和当前人口调查(CPS)的数据,我估计了一个具有异质代理和均衡效应的职业选择和退休的动态模型。我记录了蓝领和白领职业在健康和残疾下降对生产力的影响方面的差异,这影响到晚年的劳动力供应,并在生命周期模型的背景下影响职业决策。通过反事实的练习,我证明了蓝领工作相对于白领工作的额外残疾风险相当于一生消费的额外6个百分点的减少,而没有SSDI(保证了这种风险的一部分)将分别相当于蓝领和白领工作的消费减少12%和7%。此外,我发现SSDI的存在导致选择蓝领职业的人增加了3%,这与蓝领收入增加8%对职业选择的影响相当。然而,这种总体效应掩盖了选择风险厌恶程度较低的个人从事蓝领工作的重要性,以及对工资的均衡效应;在没有SSDI的情况下,对于最厌恶风险的人来说,选择蓝领职业的收入必须高出近15%。
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Occupational Choice, Retirement, and the Effects of Disability Insurance
There is much variation in the physical requirements across occupations, giving rise to great differences in later-life productivity, disability risk, and the value of Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI). In this paper, I look at how such differences across occupations affect initial career choice as well as the extent to which SSDI, which insures shocks to productivity due to disability, prompts more people to choose physically intense occupations. Using data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) and the Current Population Survey (CPS), I estimate a dynamic model of occupational choice and retirement with heterogeneous agents and equilibrium effects on earnings across occupations. I document the differences between blue-collar and white-collar occupations in the effects of declining health and disability on productivity, which affects labor supply in later life and, in the context of a life-cycle model, influences the occupation decision. Through counterfactual exercises, I show that the additional disability risk in blue-collar jobs relative to white-collar jobs is equivalent to an additional six percentage point reduction in lifetime consumption and that the absence of SSDI, which insures some of this risk, would be equivalent to, respectively, a twelve and seven percent reduction in consumption for those in blue- and white- collar jobs. Furthermore, I find that the presence of SSDI results in three percent more individuals choosing blue-collar occupations, which is comparable to the effect on occupation selection resulting from an eight-percent increase in blue-collar earnings. This overall effect, however, masks the importance of the selection of less risk-averse individuals into blue-collar jobs and the equilibrium effects on wages; earnings for the most risk-averse type would have to be nearly fifteen percent greater to choose blue-collar{{p}}occupations in the absence of SSDI.
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