Search results for "partner allowance"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

How does an allowance for a non-working younger partner affect the retirement behaviour of couples?

2021

AbstractWe examine the effect of the partner allowance (PA) in the Dutch pension system on the retirement decisions of couples using administrative data. PA was paid to people who receive the public old-age pension with a partner younger than the state pension age (SPA) and with a low own income. PA worked as a financial incentive to retire earlier, especially for the younger partners. As of 1 April 2015, new old-age pensioners are no longer entitled to this allowance. We estimate the effect of this reform on the retirement behaviour of each spouse. To account for the fact that at the same time, another reform essentially put an end to generous early retirement arrangements, we compare sing…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementEconomics and Econometricspartner allowanceStrategy and ManagementMechanical Engineering05 social sciencesMetals and AlloysAllowance (money)UNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICASpensionsAffect (psychology):CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS [UNESCO]Industrial and Manufacturing Engineeringageinghousehold labour supply0502 economics and businessEconomicsDemographic economics050207 economicshealth care economics and organizationsFinance050205 econometrics Journal of Pension Economics and Finance
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Joint retirement behaviour and pension reform in the Netherlands

2022

We examine the effects of a major pension reform in 2015 on the joint retirement decisions of working couples in the Netherlands. The reform abolished the partner allowance, a state pension supplement for a nonworking partner below the state pension age. At the same time, actuarially generous early retirement arrangements were made less attractive. Using rich administrative data, we estimate a multivariate mixed proportional hazards model that distinguishes between several sources of joint retirement: financial incentives, other causal mecha-nisms that make retirement of one spouse more likely when the other spouse retires (e.g., due to complemen-tarities in leisure or social norms) and cor…

SOCIAL-SECURITYEconomics and EconometricsAGEpartner allowanceageinghousehold labour supplyUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICASearly retirementLife-span and Life-course StudiesRESPONSESCOUPLESThe Journal of the Economics of Ageing
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