职业与工作特征:对退休预期与时间的影响

B. Helppie‐McFall, A. Sonnega, R. Willis, Péter Hudomiet
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引用次数: 15

摘要

人口老龄化和随之而来的公共预算压力激发了人们对了解影响退休时间的因素的极大兴趣。一系列社会人口和经济特征已被证明可以预测提前或推迟退休。人们对职业及其特征在老年工作者工作选择中的作用知之甚少。更多地了解工人似乎停留更长时间或更早离开的职业,可能会为政策干预指明道路,这些政策干预对个人和系统财政都有益。该项目利用与职业信息网(O*NET)的信息相联系的健康和退休研究(HRS)中的详细职业类别和工作特征,检查老年工人所从事职业的构成随时间的变化;提供一些关于职业及其特征与退休期望和结果之间关系的基本和有趣的信息;并阐明哪些职业和相关特征可能会鼓励或阻碍更长的工作寿命。随着时间的推移,职业中老年工人的百分比有很大的变化(增加或减少)。考虑详细而不是汇总的职业类别会产生有趣的附加信息。人力资源调查的受访者表示,那些体力劳动较少、压力较小、近几十年来难度没有增加的工作,以及那些人们可以根据需要减少工作时间的工作,与工作时间更长有关。虽然传统的蓝领退休更早,白领工作更久的联系出现了,但我们发现了有趣的例外,为未来的研究提供了富有成效的方向。
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Occupations and Work Characteristics: Effects on Retirement Expectations and Timing
Population aging and attendant pressures on public budgets have spurred considerable interest in understanding factors that influence retirement timing. A range of sociodemographic and economic characteristics have been shown to predict both earlier and later retirement. Less is known about the role of occupations and their characteristics on the work choices of older workers. Knowing more about the occupations that workers seem to stay in longer or leave earlier may point the way to policy interventions that are beneficial to both individuals and system finances. This project uses detailed occupational categories and work characteristics in the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) linked to information in the Occupational Information Network (O*NET) to examine compositional changes in occupations held by older workers over time; to provide some basic and interesting information about relationships between occupations and their characteristics and retirement expectations and outcomes; and to shed some light on which occupations and associated characteristics might encourage or discourage longer working lives. There are large percentage changes (increases in decreases) in the percentage of older workers in occupations over time. Considering detailed as opposed to aggregated occupational categories yields interesting additional information. Jobs that HRS respondents say entail less physical effort, less stress, and jobs that have not increased in difficulty in recent decades, and those in which people can reduce hours if desired, are associated with longer work. While the traditional blue collar-retire earlier and white collar-work longer associations emerge, we find interesting exceptions that suggest fruitful directions for future research.
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