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1.
Forum Health Econ Policy ; 21(1)2017 10 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30210051

ABSTRACT

We assess the value of the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) for research in health economics by conducting a survey of leading health economists. We analyze the survey responses to provide an assessment of the strengths of the HRS for this kind of research, as well as the obstacles that prevent it from being used more widely. We offer some suggestions as to how these obstacles might be overcome through changes to the survey and actions to increase survey awareness and access.


Subject(s)
Economics, Medical , Health Care Surveys , Health Surveys , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Economics , Humans , Research , Retirement , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States
2.
Geneva Pap Risk Insur Issues Pract ; 42(3): 475-499, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31768091

ABSTRACT

Older Americans have experienced dramatic gains in life expectancy in recent decades, but an emerging literature reveals that these gains are accumulating mostly to those at the top of the income distribution. We explore how growing inequality in life expectancy affects lifetime benefits from Social Security, Medicare, and other programs and how this phenomenon interacts with possible program reforms. We first project that life expectancy at age 50 for males in the two highest income quintiles will rise by 7 to 8 years between the 1930 and 1960 birth cohorts, but that the two lowest income quintiles will experience little to no increase over that time period. This divergence in life expectancy will cause the gap between average lifetime program benefits received by men in the highest and lowest quintiles to widen by $130,000 (in $2009) over this period. Finally we simulate the effect of Social Security reforms such as raising the normal retirement age and changing the benefit formula to see whether they mitigate or enhance the reduced progressivity resulting from the widening gap in life expectancy.

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