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Does Household Debt Influence the Labor Supply and Benefit Claiming Decisions of Older Americans?

December 12, 2013
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Working Paper by Barbara A. Butrica and Nadia S. Karamcheva

Abstract

Americans’ indebtedness has increased dramatically since the 1980s – a trend likely to have important implications for retirement security.  This study finds that older adults with debt are 8 percentage points more likely to work and 2 percentage points less likely to receive Social Security benefits than those without debt.  Not only does the presence of debt influence older adults’ behavior, but so do the amount and type of debt – particularly outstanding mortgages. Increasingly, retirement security will depend on having enough income and assets to pay for basic living expenses and to service debt.

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Author(s)
Headshot of Barbara A. Butrica
Barbara A. Butrica
Headshot of Nadia S. Karamcheva
Nadia S. Karamcheva
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Executive Summary
Citation

Butrica, Barbara A. and Nadia S. Karamcheva. 2013. "Does Household Debt Influence the Labor Supply and Benefit Claiming Decisions of Older Americans?" Working Paper 2013-22. Chestnut Hill, MA: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

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Associated Project(s)
  • BC13-09
Topics
Social Security
Publication Type
Working Paper
Publication Number
WP#2013-22
Sponsor
U.S. Social Security Administration
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