Results 141 to 150 of about 636,333 (311)
Grand Coalitions for Unpopular Reforms: Building a Cross-Party Consensus to Raise the Retirement Age [PDF]
This article argues that an increase of the retirement age from 65 years to 67 or higher, which is the most unpopular pension reform measure, is politically feasible if the major parties build either a formal or an informal grand coalition.
Martin Hering
core
Planned age of retirement and actual age of retirement
This study investigated why the age that the respondents planned to retire and the age that they actually retired differ. Using the data from the RAND Health and Retirement Study (HRS) Waves 1 (1992) through 8 (2006), we analyzed 5,727 respondents who were working and aged 51 to 61 at Wave 1. By the end of wave 8, 80.61% were retired.
openaire
Abstract University students globally face growing mental health challenges, with ethnic minority (EM) students—both local and international—being particularly vulnerable. Yet, limited research compares their experiences or identifies shared and distinct stressors, especially in non‐Western contexts.
Wang Xinyi, Naubahar Sharif
wiley +1 more source
The effects of an increase in the retirement age on health care costs: evidence from administrative data. [PDF]
Geyer J +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT Retired electric vehicle (EV) batteries can be repurposed to stationary storage batteries. While this circularity solution has attracted attention from entrepreneurs, falling battery prices, along with the longer lifetime of new batteries, high consumer expectations and limited governmental support challenge the approach.
Juliane Seika, Merla Kubli
wiley +1 more source
Differences in self-reported health between low- and high-income groups in pre-retirement age and retirement age. A cohort study based on the European Social Survey. [PDF]
Bauknecht J, Merkel S.
europepmc +1 more source
Pensions, The Option Value of Work, and Retirement [PDF]
The paper develops a model of retirement based on the option value of continuing to work. Continuing to work maintains the option of retiring on more advantageous terms later.
David A. Wise, James H. Stock
core
ABSTRACT Despite growing research on explicating travelers' decision‐making processes regarding greener travel options, there remains potential for exploring nuances of different factors and mechanisms that may encourage higher green travel. Grounded in the propositions of the push–pull–mooring framework, our study attempts to explicate whether eco ...
Chuhong Wang +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Retirement age and disability status as pathways to later-life cognitive impairment: Evidence from the Norwegian HUNT Study linked with Norwegian population registers. [PDF]
Zotcheva E +15 more
europepmc +1 more source
Default Effect in ESG Investment: When a Recommendation Goes a Long Way
ABSTRACT Individual investors display a positive attitude toward ESG investments but typically fail to act upon it. We report results from a preregistered online experiment testing a default option on 1050 US investors examining the mechanisms driving the effectiveness of default options in promoting ESG investments.
Sai Sravanthi Ramadugula +2 more
wiley +1 more source

