Publications
Researchers examining data online
Working Papers

Flexible Pensions and Labor Force Withdrawal

Erik Hernaes, Zhiyang Jia, John Piggott and Trond Christian Vigtel.

This paper studies the effect on the labor supply decisions of senior workers of reducing the eligibility age of retirement combined with actuarial neutrality, based on one particular group of private sector workers. In the 2011 Norwegian pension reform they had a fixed pension access age of 67 replaced by a flexible access age from 62 with constant present value of benefits. In a non-linear difference-in-difference approach, exploiting the absence of earnings tests, we find no effect on labor force participation. Aggregate earnings fell, mostly driven by high earners reducing their earnings. The increased liquidity seems to facilitate phased retirement.

Keywords: Retirement; Pension; Flexibility

Research Publications

Predictors of 15-year survival among Australian women with diabetes from age 76-81.

Wubishet, B., Harris, M., Acharya, S., Forder, P. and Byles, J. (2019). Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice. 

Research Publications

Prevalence of mild cognitive impairment among older people in Kazakhstan and potential risk factors

Tsoy, R., Turuspekova, S.T., Klipitskaya, N.K., Mereke, A. and Cumming, R.G. (2019). Alzheimer's Disease and Associated Disorders. 

Research Publications

Alzheimer's environmental and genetic risk scores are differentially associated with general cognitive ability and Dementia severity

Andrews, S.J., McFall, G.P., Dixon, R.A., Cherbuin, N., Eramudugolla, R. and Anstey, K.J. (2019). Alzheimer Disease and Associated Disorders. 

Research Publications

Facing Demographic Challenges: Pension Cuts or Tax Hikes?

Kudrna, G., Tran, C. and Woodland, A. (2019). Macroeconomic Dynamics. 23 (2), 625-673.

Research Publications

Dementia Stigma Reduction (DESeRvE): Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial of an online intervention program to reduce dementia-related public stigma

Kim, S., Wernerc, P., Richardsond, A. and Anstey, K.J. (2019). Contemporary Clinical Trials Communication. 

Research Publications

Factors influencing online survey response for a longitudinal cohort of young women born 1989-95.

Loxton, D., Harris, M., Forder, P., Powers, J., Townsend, N., Byles, J. and Mishra, G. (2019). Journal of Medical Internet Research. 

Research Publications

The burden of pancreatic cancer in Australia attributable to smoking.

Arriaga, M.E., Vajdic, C.M., MacInnis, R.J., Canfell, K., Magliano, D.J., Shaw, J.E., Byles, J.E., Giles, G.G., Taylor, A.W., Gill, T.K., Hirani, V., Cumming, R.G., Mitchell, P., Banks, E., Marker, J., Adelstein, B. and Laaksonen, M.A. (2019). Medical Journal Australia. 

Elderly couple researching pension options
Working Papers

Flexible long-term care insurance: An experimental study of demand

Shang Wu, Hazel Bateman, Ralph Stevens and Susan Thorp

We examine stated preferences for long-term care insurance that pays extra income instead of reimbursing care costs. Our results show that long-term care income insurance is likely to provide two important benefits to aging societies. First, it can facilitate flexible, informal, long-term care – seniors who plan to rely on family members for extensive care find income insurance particularly attractive. Second, it can enhance risk-pooling – if long-term care income insurance were available, many seniors would release funds set aside to self-insure against the risk of needing long-term care to purchase additional longevity insurance. Our results also rule out adverse selection into the long-term care income insurance product on objective risk factors. However, participants who subjectively rate themselves at higher risk of needing long-term care will select into insurance, indicating either adverse selection that is based on private information or subjective mismeasurement of future care costs.

Keywords: Long-term care insurance; aged care; informal care; retirement incomes; annuity experiment

 

Click here to download the online appendix.

Elderly couple researching pension options online
Working Papers

Means Tested Public Pensions: Designs and Impacts for an Ageing Demographic

George Kudrna and John Piggott

Abstract: This paper argues for retirement policy formulation and reforms to re-orient towards greater reliance on non-contributory means tested pensions as a primary retirement income delivery structure. These pensions will become more relevant as the number of contingent workers increases in the global north; and have the potential to reach informal workers in emerging economies who have exhausted their earnings capacity. We show that this kind of pension structure can be efficient, equitable and sustainable. If properly designed, it is especially well-suited to an ageing demographic. We briefly discuss the Australian model as an example of how well this can work.

 

Keywords: Pensions, retirement policy, labour market, population ageing

Research Publications

Within-person associations between financial hardship and cognitive performance in the PATH Through Life Study

Kiely, K., Anstey, K.J. and Butterworth, P. (2019). American Journal of Epidemiology. 

Research Publications

Eldercare and Childcare: How Does Caregiving Responsibility Affect Job Discrimination?

Henle, C. A., Fisher, G. G., McCarthy, J., Mattingly, V., Prince, M., A., and Clancy, R. L. (2019). Journal of Business and Psychology. 

Research Publications

Exploration of the impact of organizational context on a workplace safety and health intervention

Hammer, L.B., Truxillo, D.M., Bodner, T., Pytlovany, A. and Richman, A. (2019). Work & Stress.

Research Publications

Received Respect and Constructive Voice: The Roles of Proactive Motivation and Perspective Taking

Ng, T. W. H., Hsu, D. Y. and Parker, S. K. (2019).  Journal of management. doi:org/10.1177/0149206319834660. 

Research Publications

Validation of the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire in older community-dwelling adults

Brady, B., Kneebone, I.I. and Bailey, P.E. (2019). British Journal of Clinical Psychology. 

Research Publications

Validation of the five facet mindfulness questionnaire among community-dwelling older adults

Brady, B., Kneebone, I.I. and Bailey, P.E. (2019). Mindfulness.

Research Publications

Subjective memory complaints and incident dementia in a high risk older adult hypertensive population

Peters, R., Beckett, N., Antikainen, R., Rockwood, K., Bulpitt, C.J. and Anstey, K.J. (2019). Age and Ageing. 

Research Publications

Patterns of aged care use among older Australian women: A prospective cohort study using linked data

Rahman, M., Efrid, J.T. and Byles, J.E. (2019). Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics. 

Research Publications

Prevalence and context of racism experienced by older Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.

Temple, J.B., Kelaher, M. and Paradies, Y. (2019). Australasian Journal on Ageing.

Research Publications

Patterns of home and community care use among older participants in the Australian Longitudinal Study of Women's Health.

Rahman, M., Efird, J.T., Kendig, H. and Byles, J.E. (2019). European Journal of Ageing. 

Research Publications

To borrow or insure? Long term care costs and the impact of housing

Shao, A.W., Chen, H. and Sherris, M. (2019). Insurance: Mathematics and Economics.

Research Publications

Longitudinal study of factors associated with informal care provision: Evidence from older Australian's

Peng, R. and Anstey, K.J. (2019). Australasian Journal of Ageing.

Research Publications

MIND not Mediterranean diet related to 12-year incidence of cognitive impairment in an Australian longitudinal cohort study

Hosking, D.E., Eramudugolla, R., Cherbuin, N. and Anstey, K.J. (2019). Alzheimer's and Dementia. 

Research Publications

Mortality forecasting: How far back should we look in time?

Li, H. and O'Hare, C. (2019). Risks.

Working Papers

Tax Progressivity in Australia: Facts, Measurements and Estimates

Chung Tran and Nabeeh Zakariyya

We study the progressivity of Australia's personal income tax system after the introduction of a New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999. We use two data sets: administrative data from Australian Tax Office (ATO) 2004-16 and survey data from the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey 2001-16. We first document the distributions of income and tax liabilities, properties of the joint distributions of taxes paid and income, and discuss how taxes are varied across households and over time. We next provide estimates of tax progressivity using two approaches: one based on tax liability progression and one based on tax liability distribution relative to income distribution. The result based on the tax progression approach implies a significant decline in the average level of tax progressivity since 2004. Meanwhile, the result based on the tax distribution approach indicates a tax progressivity cycle with a modest decline up to 2006, then a sharp increase until 2010, and a slight decline thereafter. The personal income tax cuts for all taxpayers in the early 2000s and the introduction of tax offset for low income earners (LITO) are main driving forces. Moreover, the evolution of income distribution and interactions between income distribution and bracket creep strongly affect the overall progressivitiy level of Australia's income tax system. Hence, our findings provide insights into the dynamics of income adn tax progressivity, and a new reference for public debated on tax reform in Australia. 

Keywords: Taxation, progressiveness, income dynamics, inequality, parametric tax function, Suits index, Kakwani index.

Research Publications

Development and Use of Prediction Models for Classification of Cardiovascular Risk of Remote Indigenous Australians

Tran-Duy, A., McDermott, R., Knight, J., Hua, X., Barr, E., Arabena, K., Palmer, A. and Clarke, P. (2019). Heart, Lung and Circulation, 1-10.

Research Publications

The impact of frailty on prolonged hospitalisation and mortality in elderly inpatients in Vietnam: a comparison between the frailty phenotype and the Reported Edmonton Frail Scale

Nguyen, T.A., Nguyen, N.X., Nguyen, T.N., Nguyen, T.H.H., Thang, P., Cumming, R.G., Hilmer, S. and Huyen, V.T.T. (2019). Clinical Interventions in Ageing, 14, 381-388.

Research Publications

Multisite joint pain in older Australian women is associated with poorer psychosocial health and greater medication use.

Luca, K.D., Wong, A., Eklund, A., Fernandez, M., Byles, J.E., Parkinson, L., Ferreira, M.L. and Hartvigsen, J. (2019). Chiropractic and Manual Therapies. 

Research Publications

Linking Annuity Benefits to the Longevity Experience: A General Framework

Olivieri, A. and Pitacco, E. (2019). Annals of Actuarial Science.
 

 

Research Publications

Changes in the association between job decision latitude and work engagement at different levels of work experience: A 10-year longitudinal study

Heinrichs, K., Angerer, P., Li, J., Loerbroks, A., Weigl, M., and Müller, A. (2019). Work & Stress, 1-16. 

Research Publications

Air pollution and dementia: A systematic review

Peters, R., Ee, N., Peters, J., Booth, A., Mudway, I. and Anstey, K.J. (2019). Journal of Alzheimers Disease. 

Research Publications

Systematic Mortality Improvement Trends and Mortality Heterogeneity: Insights from Individual-Level HRS Data

Xu, M., Sherris, M., and Meyricke, R. (2019). North American Actuarial Journal. 

Research Publications

An Assessment of Mortality and Life Expectancy for China's Provinces: Based on the 2010 Provincial Census Data

Mingxu, Y. and Bei, L. (2019). Population Research

 

Research Publications

Social assistance payments and food insecurity in Australia: Evidence from the Household Expenditure Survey.

Temple, J.B., Booth, S. and Pollard C.M. (2019). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 

Research Publications

The structure and predictive value of intrinsic capacity in a longitudinal study of ageing

Beard, J.R., Jotheeswaran, A.T., Cesari, M. and De Carvalho, I.A. (2019). BMJ Open

Research Publications

Individual consequences of age stereotypes on older workers: A systematic review

Weber, J., Angerer, P., and Müller, A. (2019). Zeitschrift fur Gerontologie Geritatrie.

Research Publications

Age and job fit: The relationship between demands–ability fit and retirement and health.

Beier, M. E., Torres, W. J., Fisher, G. G., and Wallace, L. E. (2019). Journal of Occupational Health Psychology.

Research Publications

Proactivity towards workplace safety improvement: an investigation of its motivational drivers and organizational outcomes

Curcuruto, M. and Parker, S.K. and Griffin, M.A. (2019). European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology. 28 (2): pp. 221-238.

Research Publications

Home is where the mind is: Family interference with work and safety performance in two high risk industries

Johnson, R.C., Eatough, E.M., Chang, C.H., Hammer, L.B. and Truxillo, D.M. (2019). Journal of Vocational Behavior. 

Research Publications

No clear relationship between anti-hypertensive class and cognitive function over 12 months in a cohort study of community dwelling adults aged 80 and over.

Peters, R. (2019). Therapeutic Advances in Chronic Disease.

Research Publications

Affective and emotional dysregulation as pre-dementia risk markers: Exploring the mild behavioral impairment symptoms of depression, anxiety, irritability, and euphoria - CORRIGENDUM.

Ismail, Z., Gatchel, J., Bateman, D.R., Barcelos-Ferreira, R., Cantillon, M., Jaeger, J., Donovan, N.J. and Mortby, M.E. (2019). International Psychogeriatrics. 

Research Publications

Enjoy your evening, be proactive tomorrow: How off-job experiences shape daily proactivity

Ouyang, K., Cheng, B. H., Lam, W., & Parker, S. K. (2019). Journal of Applied Psychology, 104(8), 1003–1019.

Research Publications

A quality improvement project to improve storage, access and incorporation of advance care plans in a regional Australian hospital

Auret, K., Sinclair, C., Thomas, J., Price, D. and Wilkinson, A. (2019). Australian Journal of Rural Health. 

Research Publications

Combining modifiable risk factors and risk of dementia: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Peters, R., Booth, A., Rockwood, K., Peters, J., D'Este, C. and Anstey, K.J. (2019). BMJ Open. 

Research Publications

Sensory loss in China: Prevalence, use of aids, and impacts on social participation

Heine, C., Honge Gong, C. and Browning, C. (2019). Front. Public Health. 

Research Publications

Learning on the job, the use of selection, optimization, and compensation strategies, and their association with telomere length as an indicator of biological aging

Weber, J., Jörres, R., Kronseder, A., Müller, A., Weigl, M., and Chmelar, C. (2019). International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health.

Research Publications

Vegetable nitrate intakes are associated with reduced self-reported cardiovascular-related complications within a representative sample of middle-aged Australian women, prospectively followed up for 15 years.

Jackson, J.K., Patterson, A.J., MacDonald-Wicks, L.K., Forder, P.M., Blekkenhorst, L.C., Bondonno, C.P., Hodgson, J.M., Ward, N.C., Holder, C., Oldmeadow, C., Byles, J.E. and McEvoy, M.A. (2019). Nutrients. 

Research Publications

Market Price of Longevity Risk for a Multi-Cohort Mortality Model with Application to Longevity Bond Option Pricing

Xu, Y., Sherris, M. and Ziveyi, J. (2019). Journal of Risk and Insurance.

Research Publications

Prevalence and correlates of advance care directives among older Australians accessing health and residential aged care services: Multicentre audit study

Detering, K.M., Buck, K., Ruseckaite, R., Kelly, H., Sellars, M., Sinclair, C., Clayton, J.M. and Nolte, L. (2019). BMJ Open. 

Research Publications

Geographical variations in self-rated health and functional limitations among older Chinese in eight WHO-SAGE provinces.

Yiengprugsawan, V., D'Este, C., Byles, J. and Hendig, K. (2019). BMC Geriatrics. 

Research Publications

Health system costs for individual and comorbid noncommunicable diseases: An analysis of publicly funded health events from New Zealand

Blakely, T., Kvizhinadze, G., Atkinson, J., Dieleman, J., and Clarke, P. (2019). PLoS Medicine. 

Research Publications

Cognitive test norms and comparison between healthy ageing, mild cognitive impairment, and dementia: A population-based study of older Aboriginal Australians

Lavrencic, L., Bennett, H., Daylight, G., Draper, B., Cumming, R.G., Mack, H., Garvey, G., Lasschuit, D., Hill, T.Y., Chalkley, S., Dalbaere, K., Broe, G.A. and Radford, K. (2019). Australian Journal of Pscyhology. 

Research Publications

Organizational support for strengths use, work engagement, and contextual performance: The moderating role of age

Meyer, C.M., Kooij, D.T.A.M., Kroon, B., De Reuver, R. and Van Woerkom, M. (2019). Applied Research in Quality of Life.

Research Publications

Managing systematic mortality risk in life annuities: An application of longevity derivatives

Fung, M.C., Ignatieva, K. and Sherris, M. (2019). Risks.

Research Publications

When is proactivity wise? A review of factors that influence the individual outcomes of proactive behaviour.

Parker, S.K., Wang, Y., and Liao, J. (2019). Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behaviour.

Research Publications

New directions for exploring the consequences of proactive behaviors: Introduction to the special issue

Liu, W. and Tangirala, S. and Lee, C. and Parker, S. (2019). Journal of Organizational Behavior. 40 (1): pp. 1-4.

Research Publications

A review and synthesis of the work ability literature

Cadiz, D.M., Brady, G., Rineer, J.R. and Truxillo, D.M. (2019). Work, Aging and Retirement. 

Research Publications

A review and synthesis of the work ability literature

Cadiz, D.M., Brady, G., Rineer, J.R. and Truxillo, D.M. (2019). Work, Aging and Retirement. 

Research Publications

Daily perceptions of relationship quality with leaders: Implications for follower well-being

Ellis, A.M., Bauer, T.N., Erdogan, B. and Truxillo, D.M. (2019). Work & Stress. 

Research Publications

Supported decision-making: Human rights and emerging practice

Sinclair, C. (2019). Australian Journal of Dementia Care. 

Research Publications

Hysterectomy status and all-cause mortality in a 21 year Australian population-based cohort study.

Wilson, L.F., Pandeya, N., Byles, J. and Mishra, G.D. (2019). American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 

Research Publications

Covariation of intraindividual variability in cognitive speed and cognitive performance across young, middle or older adulthood

Bielak, A.A.M. and Anstey, K.J. (2019). Developmental Pscyhology.

Research Publications

The impact of type 2 diabetes and body mass index on cerebral structure is modulated by brain reserve

Walsh, E.I., Shaw, M., Sachdev, P., Anstey, K.J. and Cherbuin, N. (2019). European Journal of Neurology.

Aged care
Fact Sheets

Aged Care Policy, Provision, and Prospects

Rafal Chomik and Cris Townley

Australia’s aged care system is evolving. It is where the challenges of population ageing are most apparent and where policy choices have direct impact on the lives of Australians. This fact sheet takes stock of recent changes in aged care policy, industry, and labour force, and highlights research seeking to address its challenges.

Research Publications

Affective and emotional dysregulation as pre-dementia risk markers: Exploring the mild behavioral impairment symptoms of depression, anxiety, irritability, and europhia

Ismail, Z., Gatchel, J., Bateman, D.R., Barcelos-Ferreira, R., Cantillon, M., Jaeger, K., Donovan, N.J. and Mortby, M.E. (2019). International Pscyhogeriatrics. 

Katja Hanewald
Working Papers

Is There a Demand for Reverse Mortgages in China? Evidence from Two Online Surveys

Katja Hanewald, Hazel Bateman, Hanming Fang and Shang Wu

Reverse mortgages provide an alternative source of retirement funding by allowing older homeowners to borrow against their home. However, a recent pilot program of reserve mortgage products in several large Chinese cities saw almost no take up. To ascertain the demand for reverse mortgages in China, we conduct and analyze two online surveys that focus respectively on homeowners aged 45-65 as potential purchasers, and on adult children in the 20-49 age group representing children of potential purchasers. We address the reported shortcomings of the pilot reverse mortgage product by testing an improved product design presented in a clear and comprehensive format. In stark contrast, we find that 89% of older Chinese homeowners would be interested in this new reverse mortgage product, and 84% of adult children would recommend such a product to their parents. Participants in both surveys reported that they would use the reverse mortgage payments to fund a more comfortable retirement and to pay for better medical treatments and aged care services. Respondents’ interest in reverse mortgages was associated with their familiarity and understanding of the product, and its perceived potential to address liquidity constraints in retirement. Health status, aged care preferences and proxies for intergenerational links were also important. Our results are contrary to the common perception of intergenerational expectations of wealth transfer in China, and provide new evidence in support of the potential development of China’s reverse mortgage market.
 
The Chinese Pension System
Working Papers

Progressive Tax Changes to Superannuation in a Life Cycle Framework: Australia

George Kudrna and Alan Woodland 

Private pension pillars around the world benefit from concessional tax treatments that aim to increase private retirement incomes and house- hold savings. As shown in table 14.1, most countries tax their private pensions under the “Exempt-Exempt-Taxed” (EET) regime, in which contributions and fund income are exempt from any taxation but ben- efits are treated as ordinary income and taxed progressively. An alterna- tive approach is the “Taxed-Exempt-Exempt” (TEE) regime, which allows no deductions of contributions from gross income but then applies no further tax. By contrast, the existing tax treatment applied to Australia’s superannuation (Australia’s term for private pensions) features a flat tax rate on contributions and fund income, with benefits generally tax-free. As the statutory rate of this flat tax on contributions and fund income is 15 percent,the system is concessional for most income earners compared to progressive personal income taxation.2The concessions, however, flow largely to high-income earners, as dem- onstrated by Ingles and Denniss (2009) and Australia’s Future Tax Struc- ture (AFTS) (2008, 2010). For instance, AFTS (Australia’s Future Tax Structure 2008, 22) estimates that over 37 percent of concessional con- tributions go to only those Australians whose incomes are in the top 5 percent.

 

Keywords: Pension, concessional tax, superannuation, tax changes, Australia

Pensioners
Working Papers

Taxing Pensions: The Australian Approach

Hazel Bateman

The increasing prevalence of funded private pension systems world- wide raises questions about how retirement savings and benefits should be taxed. The three most important questions in pension taxation are: (1) At what point should pension savings be taxed? (2) Should the tax regime for pensions be integrated with personal income taxes or be sepa- rate? (3) How preferential should the taxation of pensions be? Australia’s experience with the tax treatment of private retirement savings (known in Australia as superannuation) brings considerable insight to these questions.

Pension savings can be taxed at one or more of three points—at the time of contribution, as fund earnings accrue, and/or at the time ben- efits are received. Most countries exempt (E) contributions and fund earnings from taxation and tax (T) benefits under a postpaid expendi- ture tax (EET) regime. In most cases, the benefits are treated as ordinary income and taxed progressively under the personal income tax sched- ule. Some countries tax contributions and fund earnings under a com- prehensive income tax (TTE) regime. Alternatives include a prepaid expenditure tax (TtE) under which contributions are taxed, fund earn- ings are exempt (except for excess returns),and benefits are exempt, or a hybrid approach (TTT) whereby pension savings are taxed at all three points.

 

Keywords: Pension, savings, income tax, retirement savings, Australia

Research Publications

How does the social context fuel the proactive fire? A multilevel review and theoretical synthesis

Cai, Z., Parker, S. K., Chen, Z., and Lam, W. (2019). Journal of Organizational Behaviour.

Elderly pensioners
Working Papers

Tax Expenditures on Pensions: Concepts, Concerns and Misconceptions

Rafal Chomik and John Piggott 

Tax expenditures occur when the tax treatment favors a certain activity. The forgone tax is thought to be analogous to spending and can thus attract commensurate attention. This concept was first articulated some 50 years ago by Stanley Surrey of the US Treasury Department (Surrey 1969), but exemptions to tax are as old as tax itself.1,2

As governments around the world look at ways to balance their budgets, tax expenditures will increasingly and justifiably come under scrutiny. This is particularly the case in countries with expanding funded pensions that seek to encourage self-provision for retirement or to main- tain neutrality between current and future consumption. Such arrangements can make the tax costs appear large and skewed toward the rich, while the benefits, which are far in the future, seem unsubstantiated.

 

Keywords: Tax expenditures, budgets, pensions, retirement, tax costs

Financial growth
Working Papers

Learning to Value Annuities: The Role of Information and Engagement

Hazel Bateman, Ralph Stevens, Jennifer Alonso Garcia and Eduard Ponds

Using an online experimental survey we investigate perception (in terms of understanding, riskiness and control) and valuation (elicited using iterative multiple price lists) of lifetime annuities relative to flexible drawdown products. We find that for those participants who are engaged with the experimental tasks, information provision and an online calculator can substantially reduce or eliminate behavioral drivers of the complex task of valuation of annuities. Providing balanced information and multiple opportunities to learn about the key features of the products, including impact of potential outcomes, narrows the gap between the willingness to pay and willingness to accept, and, offsets the effects of low financial capability, information framing and real-world institutional settings.

Financial independence
Working Papers

Health Risk, Insurance and Optimal Progressive Income Taxation

Juergen Jung and Chung Tran

We study the optimal progressivity of a personal income tax system in an environment where individuals are exposed to idiosyncratic shocks to health and labor productivity over the lifecycle. Our results, based on a dynamic general equilibrium model calibrated to the US economy, indicate that accounting for health risk substantially aects the social insur- ance/redistribution role of a progressive income tax system. When health risk is present but access to health insurance is limited, the optimal income tax system is more progressive in order to provide more social insurance/redistribution to unhealthy low income individuals. However, when more inclusive health insurance systems are considered, such as Medicare for all, then the optimal level of tax progressivity decreases signicantly. Importantly, when health expenditure risk is eliminated, the optimal income tax progressivity becomes more similar to the optimal progressivity level in previous studies using models with income risk only.

Research Publications

Preparing for population ageing: Estimating the cost of formal aged care in China

Mi, H., Fan, X., Lu, B., Cai, L. and Piggott, J. (2018). Journal of the Economics of Ageing. 

Mother and daughter
Working Papers

The Long-term Consequences of Having Fewer Children in Old Age: Evidence from China's "Later, Longer, Fewer" Campaign.

Yi Chen and Hanming Fang

Family planning plays a central role in contemporary population policies. However, little is known about its long-term consequences in old age because of the identification challenge. In this study, we examine how family planning affects the quality of life of the Chinese elderly. The direction of the effect is theoretically unclear. On the one hand, having fewer children allows parents to reallocate more resources to themselves, improving their well-being. On the other hand, having fewer children also leads to less care and companionship from children in old age. To empirically probe the effect of family planning, we identify the causal impact by exploiting the provincial heterogeneity in implementing the “Later, Longer, Fewer” policies in the early 1970s. We find that the policies greatly reduced the number of children born to each couple by 0.85. Parents also receive less support from children in terms of living arrangements, inter vivos transfers, and emotional support. Finally, we find that family planning has drastically different effects on elderly parent's physical and mental well-being. Whereas parents who are more exposed to the family planning policies consume more and enjoy slightly better physical health status, they report more severe depression symptoms. Our study calls for greater attention to the mental health status of the Chinese elderly.

The Chinese Pension System
Working Papers

The Chinese Pension System

Hanming Fang and Jin Feng

A detailed overview of the current state of the Chinese pension system, as well as its development, its problems and some ideas for future reforms.

Monetary growth
Working Papers

Saving Preferences after Retirement

Jennifer Alonso Garcia, Hazel Bateman, Johan Bonekamp, Arthur van Soest and Ralph Stevens

We investigate the importance of alternative motives for choosing a saving and consumption trajectory after retirement. Using an online experimental survey, we elicit the impact on advised spending patterns and underlying saving motives of alternative retirement drawdown designs, comprising different combinations of annuity income and wealth, and of major life events such as becoming frail or losing a spouse. We find that individuals' saving motives are revised in anticipation of major life events. They are less responsive to variation in `experimental' retirement drawdown arrangements, remaining aligned to prevailing institutional arrangements. Our results suggest that the main explanations for the widespread behaviour of retirees to hold onto their wealth are the desire to hold precautionary savings for health and other unforeseen expenses, facilitating an intra-household bequest, and making it possible to enjoy life now as well as later.

Research Publications

Discrimination and avoidance due to disability in Australia: evidence from a National Cross Sectional Survey

Temple, J.B., Kelaher, M. and Williams, R. (2018). BMC Public Health.

Research Publications

Australian migration propensities by visa class: an analysis of linked administrative data

Temple, J.B. and McDonald, P.F. (2019). Journal of Population Research.

George Kudrna
Working Papers

Sustainable and Equitable Pensions with Means Testing in Aging Economies

George Kudrna, Chung Tran and Alan Woodland

A means-tested pension system has a distinct feature that tailors the level of pension benefits according to individual economic status. In the context of population aging with widening gaps in life expectancies, this feature generates an automatic adjustment mechanism that (i) mitigates the pressing fiscal cost of an old-age public pension program (fiscal stabilization device) and (ii) redistributes pension benefits to those in need with shorter life expectancies (redistributive device). To evaluate this automatic adjustment mechanism, we employ an overlapping generations model with population aging. Our results indicate that this novel mechanism plays an important role in containing the adverse effects of population aging on the fiscal costs and progressivity of a pension system. More pronounced aging scenarios further strengthen the role of this mechanism. A well-designed means test rule can create a sufficiently strong automatic mechanism to keep public pensions sustainable and equitable. Importantly, it is feasible to devise a pension reform that better adapts a means-tested pension system to more pronounced demographic trends, but does not lower the welfare of current and future individuals of all ages and income.

Keywords: Population Aging, Sustainability, Social Security, Means Testing, Redistribution, Automatic Stabilizer, Overlapping Generations, Dynamic General Equilibrium.

Cepar - Retirement Decisions
Working Papers

The Taxation of Pensions under Review: Motivation, Issues, and Directions

Robert Holzmann and John Piggott

Abstract: The quest for better-designed pension schemes and effective pension system reforms has preoccupied policy makers and academic research- ers for the last several decades. The debate has swept across the globe, at times generating strong theoretical and policy arguments and creating reform leaders and followers. The notions of systemic and parametric pension reform that emerged with the debate suggest the depth of pro- posed reforms and the willingness to explore new ones.

Keywords: Pension schemes, pension, policy, taxation, reform

Research Publications

Work, nonwork, and sleep (WNS): A model and future research agenda

Crain, T., Brossoit, R. and Fisher, G. G. (2018). Journal of Business and Psychology. 

Research Publications

Erognomic education on housework for women with upper limb repetitive strain injury (RSI): a conceptual representation of therapists' clinical reasoning

Cheung, T., Clemson, L., O'Loughlin, K. and Shuttleworth, R. (2018). Disability and Rehabilitation. 

Research Publications

Inequalities in living well with dementia - the impact of deprivation on wellbeing, quality of life and life satisfaction: results from the Improving the experience of Dementia and Enhancing Active Life study

Wu, Y-T., Clare, L., Jones, I.R., Martyr, A., Nelis, S.M., Quinn, C., Victor, C.R., Lamont, R.A., Rippon, I. and Matthews, F.E. (2018). International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. 

Research Publications

Recommended long term care settings following aged care assessments in Australia

Jukic, M. and Temple, J.B. (2018). PloS one.

Research Publications

A comprehensive, multidisciplinary review of the work ability literature

Cadiz, D., Brady, G., Truxillo, D. and Rineer, J. (2018). Work, Aging and Retirement. 

Research Publications

Factors Associated with the High Prevalence of Dementia in Older Aboriginal Australians

Radford, K., Lavrencic, L.M., Delbaere, K., Draper, B., Cumming, R., Daylight, G., Mack, H.A., Chalkley, S., Bennett, H., Garvey, G., Hill, T.H., Lasschuit, D. and Broe, G.A.

(2018). Journal of Alzheimer's Disease. 

Research Publications

Exploring age-conditional effects in the emotional labor – perceived work ability linkage: A daily diary study

Rudolph, C.W. and McGonagle, A.K. (2018). Work, Aging and Retirement. 

Research Publications

Chewing function, general health and the dentition of older Australian men: the Concord Health and Ageing in Men Project

Wright, F.A.C., Milledge, K.L., Chu, S.K.Y., Hsu, B., Valdez, E., Naganathan, V., Hirani, V., Blyth, F.M., Le Couteur, D.G., Waite, L.M., Handelsman, D.J., Seibel, M.J. and Cumming, R.G. (2018). Community Dentistry and Oral Health. 

Aged care support
Working Papers

Preparing for population ageing: estimating the cost of formal aged care in China

Mi H., Fan XD., Lu B., Cai LM and Piggott J.

China, in common with many other countries in Asia, will confront rapidly increasing demand for formal Long-term Care (LTC) over coming decades. This paper uses a unique regional monthly database on utilization of comprehensive care in Qingdao, China, to estimate transition probabilities and compute duration of care, using Markov chain simulations. Duration of care estimates are then combined with price per unit of care to calculate the total cost of care for the disabled elderly. Results show that the transition probabilities from institutional care to home care are ten times higher than those in the opposite direction; the average support duration in the plan is about 53 months, including both home and institutional care, when admitted at the age of 60, and 44 months if admitted at the age of 85, with costs ranging from RMB 40-120,000 per recipient. The cost analysis suggests that this provision model is an affordable comprehensive care model for elderly Chinese.

Key words: Long-term care, China, Mortality, Markov Chain Model

Content elderly couple enjoying life
Working Papers

The Notional and the Real in China's Pension Reforms

Bei Lu, John Piggott, and Bingwen Zheng

This chapter discusses the potential expansion of the role of the notional defined contribution (NDC) paradigm in the ongoing reforms of retirement provision in China. China has remarkably high nominal retirement coverage of its population, but issues of sustainability, equity, and governance are challenging and real. Further, while many broad policy guidelines are set by the central government, jurisdictions at provincial, city, and sometimes even district level have major control over implementation, covering administration, benefit rates, and other important retirement policy features. Retirement policy and provision, regardless of the approach adopted, are necessarily shaped by fund members’ labor market experience. In China, heterogeneity is dramatic across provinces and between urban and rural settings – in development stage, cost of living, formalization level, and other characteristics. Interestingly, mature age life expectancy is remarkably uniform among formal sector workers at the time of retirement. Somewhat greater heterogeneity arises when membership of the Rural and Urban Residents Pension Scheme (RURPS) is considered, but mature age life expectancy varies by only a couple of years. The implications of a stylized NDC structure covering all three of China’s major pension systems, calibrated to be actuarially fair to different contributing members, are examined. Each system has a different contribution rate and retirement age, consistent with different life expectancies. A complementary social pension is also proposed. The chapter concludes that an increased presence of the NDC paradigm could raise aggregate welfare, especially in the large and growing Urban Employee Pension Scheme (UEPS).

Aged care support
Working Papers

Direct Estimation of Life Expectancies and Transition Rates of Residential Care Residents

Marijan Jukic

Aged care residents, residential care developers and government policy-makers need accurate information on likelihood of main events in residential care (i.e. residents’ functional decline and death). Since 20 March 2008 Australian government subsidies for residential care have been based on detailed assessments of individual care needs, and this generated 1.5 million assessment records by 30 June 2015. Four levels are assessed for three types of need - aids to daily living, behavioural needs, and complex health care. Logistic regression models are used to derive mortality and transition probabilities from these data. Backwards derivation was used to estimate mean life expectancies from these models, and microsimulation used to model distributions around means. As there has been continuing drift in assessed care needs, the mortality and transition assumptions estimates are based on the most recent year of experience. A microsimulation model of aged care residents, with all residents at 30 June 2015 as the initial population, has been constructed.

Key Words: ADL, Assistance needs, Life expectancy, Residential care, Australia

Research Publications

Cognitive rehabilitation, self-management, psychotherapeutic and caregiver support interventions in progressive neurodegenerative conditions: a scoping review

Clare, L., Kudlicka, A., Oyebode, J.R., Jones, R.W., Bayer, A., Leroi, I., Kopelman, M., James, I.A., Culverwell, A., Pool, J., Brand, A., Henderson, C., Hoare, Z., Knapp, M.,  Morgan-Trimmer, S., Burns, A., Corbett, A., Whitaker, R. and Woods, R.T. (2018). NeuroRehabilitation.

Research Publications

The impact of comorbidity on the quality of life of people with dementia: findings from the IDEAL study

Nelis, S.M., Wu, Y-T., Matthews, F.E., Martyr, A., Quinn, C., Rippon, I., Rusted, J., Thom, J.M., Kopleman, M.D., Hindle, J.V., Jones, R.W. and Clare, L. (2018). Age and Ageing. 

Conversation
Working Papers

Health Shocks and the Evolution of Consumption and Income over the Life-Cycle

Elena Capatina, Michael Keane, Shiko Maruyama

This paper studies the effects of health on earnings dynamics and on consumption inequality over the life-cycle. We build and calibrate a life-cycle model with idiosyncratic health, earnings and survival risk where individuals make labor supply and asset accumulation decisions, adding two novel features. First, we model health as a complex multi-dimensional concept. We differentiate between functional health and underlying health risk, temporary vs. persistent health shocks, and predictable vs. unpredictable shocks. Second, we study the interactions between health and human capital accumulation (learning-by-doing). These features are important in allowing the model to capture the degree to which, and the pathways through which, health impacts earnings and consumption patterns. They are also very important in estimating the value of health insurance and social insurance. A key finding is that health shocks account for roughly half of the growth in offer wage inequality over the life cycle. Eliminating health shocks leads to a 5.5% decline in the variance of the present value of earnings across all individuals.

Keywords: Health, Income Risk, Precautionary Saving, Health Insurance, Welfare

part1
Research Briefs

Retirement income in Australia: Part I – Overview

Rafal Chomik, Simon Graham, Sophie Yan, Hazel Bateman, John Piggott

This series of three CEPAR research briefs explores the current state, and projected future, of Australia’s retirement income system, marrying policy developments with the latest research. Brief 1 describes the demographic context and structure of the system, how retirement resources compare across benchmarks, countries, and generations. Brief 2 focuses on the public, poverty-alleviation element of Australia’s retirement income, primarily the Age Pension. Brief 3 looks at private, income replacement provision, particularly superannuation.

part2-400x400
Research Briefs

Retirement income in Australia: Part II – Public support

Rafal Chomik, Simon Graham, Sophie Yan, Hazel Bateman, John Piggott

This series of three CEPAR research briefs explores the current state, and projected future, of Australia’s retirement income system, presenting the latest data and highlighting relevant research. Brief 1 described the demographic context, system structure, and overall trends in retirement resources. The present brief, Brief 2, focuses on the public element of retirement income provision, primarily related to the Age Pension. It discusses policy trends, the design of pension access, benefit level, and means testing, as well as poverty and fiscal outcomes. Brief 3 covers private retirement income provision, particularly the superannuation pillar.

part3
Research Briefs

Retirement income in Australia: Part III – Private resources

Rafal Chomik, Simon Graham, Sophie Yan, Hazel Bateman, John Piggott

This series of three CEPAR research briefs takes stock of the current state, and projected future, of Australia’s retirement income system, presenting the latest data and highlighting relevant research. Brief 1 described the demographic context, system structure, and overall trends in retirement resources. Brief 2 focused on the public element of retirement income provision, primarily the Age Pension. Here, Brief 3 covers private retirement income provision, focusing on superannuation. This is done by first looking at providers (i.e., industry structure) and members (i.e., financial behaviour), then investigating the accumulation (i.e., balances, contributions, and leakages) and decumulation (e.g., products) stages, as well as touching on issues related to housing, taxation, and public sector superannuation. What becomes apparent is that Australia’s superannuation system is of considerable benefit to households and the wider economy. But it continues to evolve. Its competitive environment is changing and policymakers are looking at ways to improve efficiency and developing measures for a retirement income framework in which individuals will be better able to manage risks in retirement.

Dr Xiangling Liu
Working Papers

The Income Elasticity of Housing Demand in New South Wales, Australia

Xiangling Liu

This paper studies the theoretical relationship between house prices and income by using the user cost equilibrium condition. Empirically, the long-run and short-run dynamics of this relationship are studied by using data for 144 Local government areas (LGA) over 25 years from 1991 to 2015 in the state of New South Wales, Australia. The income elasticity of house prices for the state is estimated to be 1.07 by multi-factor panel data models and the cointegration analysis. The income elasticities across locations demonstrate a spatial pattern, higher in Sydney and the Sydney surrounds and diminishing as going to inland regional and rural areas. The Granger Causality of the co-integrated relationship has been studied sequentially and proves the unidirectional causality from income to house prices. Finally, the state-wide common factors are found to show widespread signicance in contrast to the Sydney-wide common factors which only impact signicantly the areas that surround Sydney within a certain spatial range.
Research Publications

The role of athletic identity in the development of athlete burnout: The moderating role of psychological flexibility

Chang,  W. H., Wu, C. H., Kuo, C. C. and Chen, L. H. (2018). Psychology of Sport and Exercise. 

Research Publications

Prognostic effects of selection, optimization and compensation strategies on work ability - Results from the representative lidA cohort study on work, age, and health in Germany

Weber, J., Müller, A., Stiller, M. and Borchart, D. (2018). International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health.