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The Retirement Consumption Conundrum: Evidence from a Consumption Survey

by Johnathan Fisher, David S. Johnson, Joseph Marchand, Timothy M. Smeeding, and Barbara Boyle Torrey

WP#2005-14

Abstract

While the life-cycle hypothesis predicts that consumption remains smooth during the transition from work into retirement, recent studies have shown that consumption declines at retirement. This empirical result has been referred to as the retirement consumption puzzle. Previous literature has most often relied on food expenditures to estimate the decline in consumption at retirement.

We add to this literature by using broader definitions of consumption data from the Consumer Expenditure Survey (CEX), which is a survey designed to estimate total household expenditures. We conduct cohort analysis, using data on four cohorts over 20 years from 1984 to 2003. Our results using only food expenditures are on the lower end of the distribution of existing results. As we use broader measures of consumption, our results suggest that the retirement consumption conundrum decreases by more than half. Further, another contribution of this analysis is to widen the focus of the study of the well-being of the elderly. The retirement consumption puzzle does not tell the whole story on the well-being of the elderly. While we find that consumption-expenditures decrease by about 2.5 percent when individuals retire, expenditures continue to decline at about a rate of 1 percent per year after that.

For executive summary in PDF

For full paper in PDF

 

Jonathan Fisher is a research economist on consumer expenditures at the Bureau of LaborStatistics. Joseph Marchand is a research associate at the Center for Policy Research at Syracuse University. Timothy Smeeding, Ph.D., is an economist and the Maxwell Professor of Public Policy at The Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University. 
Tags: Savings and Consumption, Working Papers,
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