Publications
Research Publications

Low protein intake, physical activity, and physical function in European and North American community-dwelling older adults: a pooled analysis of four longitudinal aging cohorts

Mendonça, N., Hengeveld, L. M., Visser, M., Presse, N., Canhão, H., Simonsick, E. M.,  Jagger, C., et al. (2021). Am J Clin Nutr. 114(1), 29-41

Research Publications

Efficacy and Safety of Paracetamol for Pain: An Overview of Systematic Reviews

Abdel Shaheed, C., Esteves Ferreira, G., Dmitritchenko, A., McLachlan, A., Day, R., Lin, C.W.C., Langendyk, V., Stanaway, F., Latimer, J., Kamper, S.J., McLachlan, H., Ahedi, H. and Maher, C. (2021). Medical Journal of Australia. 214(7), 324-331.

Research Publications

Components and Parents' Infant and Young Child Feeding Concerns: A Mixed-Methods Study of Recipe Posts Shared in Thai Facebook Groups for Parents

Supthanasup, A., Banwell, C., Kelly, M. and Yiengprugsawan, V.S. (2021). Nutrients. 13(4), 1186.

Research Publications

Estimating the effect of health assessments on mortality, physical functioning and health care utilisation for women aged 75 years and older

Dolja-Gore, X., Byles, J.E., Tavener, M.A., Chojenta, C.L., Majeed, T., Nair, B.R. and Mishra, G.D. (2021). PLoS ONE. 16(4), e0249207

Research Publications

The moderating role of honesty-humility in the association of agreeableness with interpersonal competency: A study of managers in two countries

Wang, Y., Dunlop, P., Parker, S. K., Griffin, M. A., & Gachunga, H. (2021). Applied Psychology: An International Review. 

Research Publications

Onset and progression of chronic disease and disability in a large cohort of older Australian women

Rahman, M., Jagger, C., Princehorn, E., Beard, J., Kowal, P., Byles, J. (2021). Maturitas. 158, 25-33

Research Publications

Why is inequality higher among the old? Evidence from China

Hanewald, K., Jia, R., and Liu, Z. (2021). China Economic Review. 66, #101592.

Research Publications

Two-year stability and change among the honesty-humility, agreeableness and conscientiousness scales of the HEXACO100 in an Australian cohort, aged 24–29 years

Dunlop, P. D., Bharadwaj, A. A., & Parker, S. K. (2021). Personality and Individual Differences. 171, 110601.

Research Publications

Invited Commentary: Mild Behavioral Impairment: Challenges Facing a Quickly Developing Evidence Base

Mortby, M.E. (2021). International Psychogeriatrics. 33(3), 209-212. 

Research Publications

Job crafting towards strengths and job crafting towards interests in overqualified employees: Different outcomes and boundary effects

Zhang, F., Wang, B., Qian, J., & Parker, S. K. (2021). Journal of Organizational Behavior. 

Research Publications

Cost‐effectiveness of combination therapy for patients with systemic sclerosis–related pulmonary arterial hypertension

Tran‐Duy, A., Morrisroe, K., Clarke, P., Stevens, W., Proudman, S., Sahhar, J., et al. (2021). Journal of the American Heart Association. 10(7), e015816. 

The Chinese Pension System
Working Papers

A Fistful of Dollars: Financial Incentives, Peer Information, and Retirement Savings

Rob Bauer, Inka Eberhardt, and Paul Smeets

Abstract: To understand what motivates individuals to look at their pension situation and take adequate savings decisions, we conduct two field experiments with 226,946 and 257,433 pension fund participants. We find peer-information statements do not increase the rate at which individuals check their pension information, but lottery-type financial incentives do. Offering a few large prizes rather than many small prizes is most effective. However, the uptake of pension information does not lead to improved pension knowledge nor to increased self-reported savings three weeks after our intervention.

Research Publications

Gender Matters: A Multilevel Analysis of Gender and Voice at Work

Cooper, R., Mosseri, S., Vromen, A., Baird, M., Hill, E., Probyn, E. (2021). British Journal of Management. 32(3), 725-743

Research Publications

Diet Quality in an Ethnically Diverse Population of Older Men in Australia

Stanaway F.F., Ribiero R., Khalatbari-Soltani S., Cvejic E., Blyth F.M., Naganathan V., Handelsman D.J., Le Couteur D.G., Simpson S.J., Waite L.M., Cumming R.G., Hirani V. (2021). European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 

Research Publications

Systematic Review of Coexistent Epileptic Seizures and Alzheimer’s Disease: Incidence and Prevalence

Xu, Y., Lavrencic, L., Radford, K., Booth, A., Yoshimura, S., Anstey, K.J., Anderson, C.S., Peters, R. (2021). Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

Pension Systems in the Developing World: Current Challenges and Future Directions
Working Papers

Pension Systems in the Developing World: Current Challenges and Future Directions

Seda Peksevim

Foreword: Today, people’s greatest financial concern is no longer paying their short-term bills or credit-card debt. According to the new study by Zurich Insurance Group and the University of Oxford (2019), ‘retirement security is the top financial worry’ for workers in 14 out of 16 countries. Likewise, recent surveys on old-age income suggest that nearly half of the respondents from different parts of the world do not feel secure about having a comfortable retirement (AARP Foundation, 2018; Credit Suisse, 2020).

While a lack of retirement savings has turned out to be a global phenomenon, most studies cover the design of pension systems in developed countries, which face relatively few challenges compared to developing ones. Moreover, from a handful of papers on developing regions, there is a tendency to discuss pension- related issues in the context of specific countries or topics. To this end, this study aims to provide an overall and detailed picture of the public and private pension systems in the developing world, including the present challenges and future directions.

The first part of the paper presents an overview of public pensions in developing countries. It illustrates the impact of ageing on sustainability and the adequacy of pay-as-you-go plans, along with some suggestions for the future of state pensions. In the second part, the paper focuses on private pension systems in the developing world and discusses the reasons for low pension savings with respect to the issues of coverage, contribution, and investment performance. This section also concludes by proposing certain recommendations for private pensions in the light of financial as well as behavioural and technological developments.

This work was made possible by the invaluable research support from the Pensions Scholarship Trust and IPE Magazine. Special thanks are due to Prof. Metin Ercan and Prof. Vedat Akgiray for their encouragement and guidance in my doctoral studies on pensions. I am also grateful to many researchers and colleagues from different parts of the world, notably Prof. Olivia Mitchell, Prof. Christopher Sier, Prof. Umut Çetin, Dr. Oğuz Karahan, Yaşar Kemal Peştreli, Joseph Mariathasan, Ziga Vizintin, Wojciech Sieczkowski, and Manfred Jormakka, for their fruitful discussion and valuable suggestions.

Mike Sherris CEPAR
Working Papers

A Group Regularisation Approach for Constructing Generalised Age- Period-Cohort Mortality Projection Models

Dilan SriDaran, Michael Sherris, Andrés M. Villegas and Jonathan Ziveyi

Abstract: Given the rapid reductions in human mortality observed over recent decades and the uncertainty associated with their future evolution, there have been a large number of mortality projection models proposed by actuaries and demographers in recent years. However, many of these suer from being overly complex, thereby producing spurious forecasts, particularly over long horizons and for small, noisy datasets. In this paper, we exploit statistical learning tools, namely group regularisation and cross validation, to provide a robust framework to construct such discrete- time mortality models by automatically selecting the most appropriate functions to best describe and forecast particular datasets. Most importantly, this approach produces bespoke models using a trade-o between complexity (to draw as much insight as possible from limited datasets) and parsimony (to prevent overfitting to noise), with this trade-o designed to have specific regard to the forecasting horizon of interest. This is illustrated using both empirical data from the Human Mortality Database and simulated data, using code that has been made available within a user-friendly open-source R package StMoMo.

Keywords: Mortality projection, regularisation, cross validation, Age-period-cohort model 

 

Research Publications

The Joint Effects of Diet and Dietary Supplements in Relation to Obesity and Cardiovascular Disease over a 10-Year Follow-Up: A Longitudinal Study of 69,990 Participants in Australia

Xu, X., Shi, Z., Liu, G., Chang, D., Inglis, S.C., Hall, J.J., Schutte, A.E., Byles, J.E. and Parker, D. (2021). Nutrients. 13(3), 944

Research Publications

Will the COVID-19 pandemic affect population ageing in Australia?

Wilson, T., Temple, J. and Charles-Edwards, E. (2021). Journal of Population Research. 

Research Publications

Public Knowledge, Preferences and Experiences about Medical Substitute Decision-making: A National Cross-sectional Survey

Sellars, M., Tran, J., Nolte, L., White, B.P., Sinclair, C., Fetherstonhaugh, D., Detering, K. (2021). BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care. 

Research Publications

Will the COVID-19 pandemic affect population ageing in Australia?

Wilson, T., Temple, J. & Charles-Edwards, E. (2021). Journal of Population Research.

Research Publications

Common Factor Cause-Specific Mortality Model

Zittersteyn, G., Alonso-García, J. (2021). Risks. 9(12), 1-30.

Research Publications

A Visit with Viv: Empathising with a Digital Human Character Embodying the Lived Experiences of Dementia

Papadopoulos, C., Kenning, G., Bennett, J., Kuchelmeister, V., Ginnivan, N. and Neidorf, M.J.D. (2021). Dementia. 

Labour Supply Incentives of Social Security Programs: Some Australian Lessons for the Korean Case
Working Papers

Labour Supply Incentives of Social Security Programs: Some Australian Lessons for the Korean Case

Michael Keane

Abstract: The Retirement income system in South Korea is a patchwork of different programs, none of which is particularly effective at reducing poverty among senior citizens. Program benefits are very poorly targeted, meaning a very large fraction of the elderly receive modest benefits that are generally inadequate to lift a houshold out of poverty. The consequence is that South Korea has the highest elderly poverty rate in the OECD. I will argue that a better targeted system - with more generous benefits aimed at the fewer recipients - is likely to be welfare enhancing.

However, it seems clear that elderly poverty in Korea cannot be addressed merely by reforming the retirement income system. To address the root causes of the problem, structural reforms are needed to break down Korea's dual labor market system. Under that system, a large share of workers are in informal jobs where they do not make or receive mandated retirement contributions.

Research Publications

A meta-synthesis of care and support for older adults in Africa

Awuviry-Newton, K., Tavener, M., Wales, K., Denham, A.M.J. and Byles, J. (2021). Journal of Family Studies

Research Publications

I'll never be one of the boys': Gender harassment of women working as pilots and automotive trades people

Foley, M., Oxenbridge, S., Cooper, R., Baird, M. (2021). Gender, Work and Organization. 1-16

Research Publications

Can high-quality jobs help workers learn new tricks? A multi-disciplinary review of work design for cognition

Parker, S. K., Ward, M. K., & Fisher, G. G. (2021). Academy of Management Annals. 

Research Publications

Advance Care Planning Participation by People with Dementia: A Cross-Sectional Survey and Medical Record Audit

Bryant, J., Sellars, M., Waller, A., Detering, K., Sinclair, C., Ruseckaite, R., White, B.P., Nolte, L. (2021). BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care.

Research Publications

Using a smartphone application (App) to assist older adults to navigate their local area during extreme weather events and changing environmental conditions: A qualitative study

Wilson, L., O'Loughlin, K., Hector, R. Black, D. (2021). Australasian Journal on Ageing. 40(1), 95-99

Research Publications

Optimal Social Security Claiming Behavior under Lump Sum Incentives: Theory and Evidence.

Hurwitz, A., Mitchell, O., Rogalla, R., and Schimetschek, T. (2021). Journal of Risk and Insurance. 88(1), 5-27

Research Publications

Clustering method for censored and collinear survival data

Liverani, S., Leigh, L., Hudson, I. and Byles, J.E. (2021). Computational Statistics. 36, 35-60.

Research Publications

Measuring the economic impact of hospital-acquired complications on an acute health service

Fernando-Canavan, L., Gust, A., Hsueh, A., Tran-Duy, A., Kirk, M., Brooks, P. and Knight, J. (2021). Australian Health Review. 45(2), 135-142.

Research Publications

Culturally competent communication in Indigenous disability assessment: a qualitative study

Ferdinand, A., Massey, L., Cullen, J., Temple, J., Meiselbach, K., Paradies, Y., Baynam, G., Savarirayan, R. & Kelaher, M. (2021). International journal for equity in health. 20(1), article 60 p.1-12.

Research Publications

An Examination of Four Australian Guardianship Laws: Analysis of Supported Decision-making for People with Dementia

Blake, M., Stewart, C., Castelli-Arnold, P., Sinclair, C. (2021). Journal of Law & Medicine. 28(2), 389-420. PMID:33768748.

Research Publications

The Effect of Opioids on the Cognitive Function of Older Adults: Results from the Personality and Total Health through Life Study.

Neelamegam, M., Zgibor, J., Chen, H., O’rourke, K., Bakour, C., Rajaram, L. and Anstey, K.J. (2021). Age and Ageing. #afab048.

Research Publications

Investigating the joint effects of overload and underload on chronic fatigue and wellbeing

Cham, B.S., Andrei, D., Griffin, M.A., Grech, M. & Neal, A. (2021). Work & Stress.

Katja Hanewald
Working Papers

Willingness to take financial risks and insurance holdings: A European survey

Martin Eling, Omid Ghavibazoo and Katja Hanewald

Abstract: We investigate the relationship between self-reported willingness to take financial risks and ownership of life insurance and long-term care insurance. For a representative sample of individuals aged 50+ from 14 countries and controlling for demographic and socioeconomic determinants of insurance demand, we find a positive link between willingness to take financial risks and ownership of both long-term care insurance and life insurance. The link is stronger for whole life insurance compared to term life insurance and long-term care insurance. Two robustness tests that (i) use risky asset ownership instead of willingness to take financial risks and (ii) focus on specific demographic and socioeconomic groups confirm the results for life insurance, while the results for long-term care insurance are less clear. Our empirical results cannot be explained by the classical expected utility framework and thus support recent research indicating that alternative models (e.g., prospect theory) are needed to explain insurance demand.

Keywords: Risk attitudes; Long-term care insurance; Life insurance; SHARE data

Research Publications

Apathy predicts cognitive decline over 24 months in premanifest Huntington's disease

Andrews, S.C., Langbehn, D.R., Craufurd, D., Durr, A., Leavitt, B.R., Roos, R.A., Tabrizi, S.J., Stout, J.C., and the TRACK-HD Investigators. (2021). Psychological Medicine. 51(8), 1338-1344.

Research Publications

Charlson Comorbidity Index as a predictor of repeated hospital admission and mortality among older women diagnosed with cardiovascular disease

Shebeshi, D.S., Dolja-Gore, X. and Byles, J.E. (2021). Aging Clinical and Experimental Research. 33(10), 2873-2878

Mengyi Xu
Working Papers

Functional disability with systematic trends and uncertainty: A comparison between China and the U.S.

Yu Fu, Michael Sherris and Mengyi Xu

Abstract: China and the U.S. are two contrasting countries in terms of functional disability and long-term care. China is experiencing declining family support for long-term care and developing private long-term care insurance. The U.S. has more developed public aged care and private long-term care insurance than China. Changes in the demand for long-term care are closely related to levels of and trends in mortality and functional disability. To understand future potential demand for long-term care, we compare mortality and functional disability experiences in both China and the U.S using multi-state latent factor intensity model to estimate time trends and systematic uncertainty in transition rates. The estimation results show that if trends continue, both countries will experience longevity improvement with morbidity compression and a declining proportion of the older population with a functional disability. Although the elderly Chinese have an estimated shorter life expectancy, they are expected to spend a smaller proportion of that future lifetime functionally disabled in contrast to the U.S. Systematic uncertainty is shown to be significant in future trends in disability rates and our model estimated higher uncertainty in trends for the Chinese elderly, especially for urban residents.

Keywords: Functional disability; life expectancy; systematic trend and uncertainty; multi-state latent factor intensity model

Research Publications

Trends in Anticholinergic and Opioid dispensing in older adults from 2004 to 2015: Results from the Personality and Total Health (PATH) Through Life Study

Neelamegam, M., Zgibor, J., Chen, H., O’Rourke, K., Bakour, C., Rajaram, L., Anstey, K.J. (2021). Australasian Journal on Ageing. 1-5

 

Research Publications

Multidimensional Apathy: The utility of the Dimensional Apathy Scale in Huntington's disease

Atkins, K., Andrews, S.C., Stout, J.C., & Chong, T.T-J. (2021). Movement Disorders Clinical Practice. 8(3), 361-370

Research Publications

Equity and evidence during vaccine rollout: stepped wedge cluster randomised trials could help

Bell, K.J.L., Glasziou, P., Stanaway, F. and Irwig, L. (2021). BMJ. 372, n435

Research Publications

Dementia risk reduction in practice: The knowledge, opinions and perspectives of Australian healthcare providers

Zheng, L., Godbee, K., Steiner, G.Z., Daylight, G., Ee, C., Hill, T.Y., Hohenberg, M.I., Lautenschlager, N.T., McDonald, K., Pond, D., Radford, K., Anstey, K.J., Peters, R. (2021). Australian Journal of Primary Health. 27(2), 136-142.

 

Pensions and Participation: Evidence from World War II Veterans in Australia
Working Papers

Pensions and Participation: Evidence from World War II Veterans in Australia

David Rodgers

Abstract: Older male labour force participation in Australia plummeted in the last three decades of the twentieth century. This paper investigates the extent to which this fall in participation was due to a large share of these older men having fought in World War II. Australian World War II veterans could access retirement and disability benefits that the rest of the population could not; they also had worse health than non-veterans. Sharp quasi-random variation in service across birth cohorts in Australia enables the effects of WWII service to be measured. WWII veterans had slightly lower labour force participation over prime working years (around 1 percentage point lower in their late 40s), and then much lower participation from the age of 60 onwards (around 17 percentage points lower in their early 60s). Sixty was the access age for the retirement pension given to veterans. Survey data indicate that the retirement expectations of veterans, when young, were clustered at this age. Various measurements of the health effects of WWII service indicate ill health is unlikely to explain the sharp fall in labour participation at sixty. Despite these findings, in aggregate, WWII service can explain only a modest share of the fall in older male labour participation in Australia in the late twentieth century, suggesting other factors must be responsible for most of the fall. These results contribute to the litera- ture on the labour supply effects of retirement and disability programs. In particular, they are consistent with earnings tests having large effects on participation and program parameters framing retirement decisions.

 

 

Research Publications

Global implications of a US-led currency war

McKibbin, W.J. and Triggs, A.J. (2021). The World Economy. 44(6), 1484-508.

workers in the CBD
Reports & Government Submissions

An Employer Lens on COVID-19: Adapting to change in Australian workplaces

Marian Baird, Myra Hamilton, Lisa Gulesserian, Alison Williams, Sharon Parker

This report provides the first detailed analysis of how Australian employers have experienced and adapted to COVID-19. Between May to October 2020, the research team interviewed 32 leaders, managers and officers at 28 organisations across Australia. Employers from 14 private, 11 government (federal, state and local) and three not-for-profit organisations participated, with between 8 and 35,000 employees in seven states and territories. Employers were in industries including advertising, community services, engineering, fast-moving consumer goods, government, healthcare, higher education, hospitality, insurance, pharmaceutical, professional services/legal, publishing, retail, telecommunications, transport, utilities, and wholesale.

Many surveys on COVID-19 in 2020 focused on worker preferences. This study uniquely focuses on the employer response. While not representative of all businesses in Australia, the actions of the 28 participating organisations and the findings from our analysis highlight innovations in response to government directives to work from home and the emergence of good practices that may transform the work-life balance of Australians.

The findings are reported in five sections, based on thematic analysis of the interview data.

Research Publications

Utility Estimations of Health States of Older Australian Women with Atrial Fibrillation Using SF-6D

Shehzad, A., Byles, J., Nair, B.R., Majeed, T., Weaver, N. and Forder, P. (2021). Quality of Life Research. 30(5), 1457-1466. 

Research Publications

The Prospective Association between Socioeconomic Status and Falls among Community-Dwelling Older Men.

Khalatbari-Soltani, S., Stanaway, F., Sherrington, C., Blyth, F.M., Naganathan, V., Handelsman, D.J., Seibel, M.J., Waite, L.M., Le Couteur, D.G., Cumming, R.G. (2021). Journals Gerontol Ser A.

Research Publications

Energy poverty and retirement income sources in Australia

Fry, J. M., Farrell, L., & Temple, J. (2021). Energy Economics. 106, 105793

 

Research Publications

Validation of ‘HD-Mobile’ a smartphone application for cognitive assessment in Huntington’s Disease

McClaren, B., Andrews, S.C., Glikmann-Johnston, Y., Mercieca, E., Murray, N.W.G., Loy, C., Bellgrove, M.A., & Stout, J.C. (2021). Journal of Neurology. 268(2), 590-601

Research Publications

Financial Literacy and Financial Decision-making at Older Ages

Fong, J., Koh, B., Mitchell, O., and Rohwedder, S. (2021). Pacific Basin Finance Journal. 65, 101481

Research Publications

A Systematic and Critical Review of Research on Respect in Leadership

Rudolph, C.W., Katz, I.M., Ruppel, R., & Zacher, H. (2021). Leadership Quarterly. 32(1), 101492

Research Publications

The association between antioxidant intake, dietary pattern and depressive symptoms in older Australian men: the Concord Health and Ageing in Men Project

Das, A., Cumming, R., Naganathan, V., Ribeiro, R., Le Couteur, D., Handelsman, D., Waite, L., & Hirani, V. (2021). European Journal of Nutrition. 60(1), 443–454.

Research Publications

Cohort Profile Update: The PATH Through Life Project

Anstey, K.J., Butterworth, P., Christensen, H., Easteal, S., Cherbuin, N., Leach, L., Burns, R., Kiely, K.M., Mortby, M.E., Eramudugolla, R., Gad, I. (2021). International Journal of Epidemiology. 50(1): 35-36.

Research Publications

Designing SMART teamwork: How work design can boost performance in virtual teams

Klonek, F., & Parker, S. K. (2021). Organizational Dynamics. 50(1).

Research Publications

Dementia stigma reduction (DESeRvE) through education and virtual contact in the general public: A multi-arm factorial randomised controlled trial

Kim, S., Richardson, A., Werner, P., Anstey, K.J. (2021). Dementia.

Research Publications

Intergenerational Programmes Bringing Together Community Dwelling Non-familial Older Adults and Children: A Systematic Review

Peters, R., Ee, N., Ward, S.A., Kenning, G., Radford, K., Goldwater, M., Dodge, H.H., Lewis, E., Xu, Y., Kudrna, G., Hamilton, M., Peters, J., Anstey, K.J., Lautenschlager, N.T., Fitzgerald, A., Rockwood, K. (2021). Archives of Gerontology & Geriatrics. Volume 94, 104356.

Warwick McKibbin
Working Papers

Macroeconomic policy adjustments due to COVID- 19: Scenarios to 2025 with a focus on Asia

Roshen Fernando and Warwick J. McKibbin

Abstract: This paper updates the analysis of the global macroeconomic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic in McKibbin and Fernando (2020c) with data as of late October 2020. It also extends the focus to Asian economies and explores four alternative policy interventions coordinated across all economies. The first three policies relate to fiscal policy: an increase in transfers to households of an additional 2% of GDP in 2020; an increase in government spending on goods and services in all economies of 2% of GDP in 2020; an increase in government infrastructure spending in all economies in 2020. The fourth policy is a public health intervention similar to the approach of Australia that successfully manages the virus (flattens the curve) through testing, contact tracing and isolating infected people, coupled with the rapid deployment of an effective vaccine by mid-2021.

The policy that is most supportive of a global economic recovery is the successfully implemented public health policy. Each of the fiscal policies assists in the economic recovery with public sector infrastructure having the most short-term stimulus and longer- term growth benefits.

Keywords: COVID-19, pandemics, infectious diseases, risk, macroeconomics, DSGE, CGE, G- Cubed

Mike Sherris CEPAR
Working Papers

Portfolio Management for Insurers and Pension Funds and COVID-19: Targeting Volatility for Equity, Balanced and Target-Date Funds with Leverage Constraints

Bao Doan, Jonathan J. Reeves and Michael Sherris

Abstract: Insurers and pension funds face the challenges of historically low interest rates and volatility in equity markets, that have been accentuated due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Recent advances in equity portfolio management with a target volatility have been shown to deliver improved on average risk adjusted return, after transaction costs. This paper studies these targeted volatility portfolios in applications to equity, balanced and target-date funds with varying constraints on leverage. Conservative leverage constraints are particularly relevant to pension funds and insurance companies, with more aggressive leverage levels appropriate for alternative investments. We show substantial improvements in fund performance for differing leverage levels and that the return per unit of risk is not significantly impacted by the leverage constraint. Of most interest to insurers and pensions funds, we show that the highest return per unit of risk is in targeted volatility balanced portfolios with equity and bond allocations. Furthermore, we demonstrate the outperformance of targeted volatility portfolios during major stock market crashes, including the crash from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic, Equity investment, Portfolio management, Target-date funds, Volatility management JEL classification: C53, G17.

 

 

Research Publications

The Association between Home Ownership and the Health of Older Men: Cross‐Sectional Analysis of the Australian Concord Health and Ageing in Men Project

Khalatbari‐Soltani, S., Cumming, R.G., Chomik, R., Blyth F.M., Naganathan V., Handelsman D.J., Le Couteur D.G., Waite L.M., Stanaway F. (2021). Australas J Ageing. 00: 1– 8.

Research Publications

Prevalence and association of continuous polypharmacy and frailty among older women: A longitudinal analysis over 15 years

Thiruchelvam, K., Byles, J., Hasan, S.S., Egan, N. and Kairuz, T. (2021). Maturitas. 146, 18-25

Research Publications

A Systematic Review and Content Analysis of Australian Health Care Substitute Decision-making Online Resources

Tran, J., Sellars, M., Nolte, L., White, B., Sinclair, C., Fetherstonhaugh, D., Detering, K. (2021). Australian Health Review.

Research Publications

Projections of older European migrant populations in Australia, 2016-56

Wilson, T., Temple, J., Brijnath, B., McDonald, P. and Utomo, A. (2021). Journal of Population Ageing

Research Publications

Projections of older European migrant populations in Australia, 2016-56

Wilson, T., Temple, J., Brijnath, B., McDonald, P. and Utomo, A. (2021). Journal of Population Ageing. 

Research Publications

Projections of Older European Migrant Populations in Australia, 2016–56.

Wilson, T., Temple, J., Brijnath, B. et al. (2021). Journal of Population Ageing.

 
Research Publications

Frailty and potentially inappropriate medications using the 2019 Beers Criteria: Findings from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health (ALSWH)

Thiruchelvam, K., Byles, J., Hasan, S.S., Egan, N. and Kairuz, T. (2021). Aging Clinical and Experimental Research. 33(9), 2499-2509

Research Publications

The relationship between rural to urban migration in China and risk of depression in later life: an investigation of life course effects

Zhang, N., Nazroo, J. and Vanhoutte, B. (2021). Social Science and Medicine. 270, 113637

Research Publications

Trends in life expectancy and healthy life years at birth and age 65 in the UK, 2008-2016, and other countries of the EU28: An observational cross-sectional study

Welsh, C. E., Matthews, F. E., & Jagger, C. (2021). Lancet Reg Health Eur. 2, 100023

Research Publications

Inadequate completion of advance care directives by individuals with dementia: national audit of health and aged care facilities

Bryant, J., Sellars, M., Sinclair, C., Detering, K., Buck, K., Waller, A., White, B.P. and Nolte, L. (2021). BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care

Research Publications

Inadequate Completion of Advance Care Directives by Individuals with Dementia: National Audit of Health and Aged Care Facilities

Bryant, J., Sellars, M., Sinclair, C., Detering, K., Buck, K., Waller, A., White, B.P., Nolte, L. (2021). BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care. 

Research Publications

Individual differences and changes in subjective wellbeing during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic

Zacher, H. & Rudolph, C.W. (2021). American Psychologist. 76(1), 50-62

Research Publications

Longitudinal Trajectories of Hippocampal Volume in Middle to Older Age Community Dwelling Individuals

Fraser, M.A., Walsh, E.I., Shaw, M.E., Abhayaratna, W.P., Anstey, K.J., Sachdev, P.S., Cherbuin, N. (2021). Neurobiology of Aging. 97, 97-105.

Research Publications

Cost-effectiveness of Dementia Prevention Interventions

McRae, I., Zheng, L., Bourke, S., Cherbuin, N., Anstey, K.J. (2021). Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease. 8(2), 210-217. 

Research Publications

Cognitive Health Expectancies of Cardiovascular Risk Factors for Cognitive Decline and Dementia

Zheng, L., Matthews, F.E., Anstey, K.J. (2021). Age & Ageing. 50(1), 169-175. 

Research Publications

Hazard Perception in Older Drivers with Eye Disease

Wood, J.M., Black, A.A., Anstey, K.J., Horswill, M.S. (2021). Translational Vision Science & Technology. 10(1), 31.

Research Publications

Cost-Effectiveness of Dementia Prevention Interventions.

McRae I, Zheng L, Bourke S, Cherbuin N, Anstey KJ.J Prev Alzheimers Dis. 2021;8(2):210-217. doi: 10.14283/jpad.2020.71.PMID: 33569569

Internet Use and Cognition among Middle-Aged and Older Adults in China: A Cross-Lagged Panel Analysis
Working Papers

Alcohol Drinking and Population Health: Evidence from China’s Older Adults

Dandan Yu, Bei Lu, and John Piggott

Abstract: Background: Results of research into the effects of alcohol drinking on population health are inconsistent. Some studies suggest that light to moderate alcohol consump- tion can have a protective effect on morbidity and mortality. But others challenge this view and claim that alcohol use could lead to health loss regardless of the amount. We contribute evidence to this debate by investigating the association between alcohol drinking and all-cause mortality among older adults in China.

Methods: We use nationally representative samples from the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey and the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study. Cox regressions compare ever drinkers who had been exposed to alcohol at some time and lifelong abstainers. We then subdivide ever drinkers into former drinkers who had stopped drinking and current drinkers who were still consuming alcohol. Cox results are supplemented with the interpolated Markov chain approach to calculate total and disability-free life expectancy.

Results: Among older males, ever drinkers seemed to have similar mortality risks to lifelong abstainers. Compared to abstinence, mortality was elevated for former male drinkers, although the effects were generally insignificant. Current male drinkers aged between 65 and 85 had a significantly lower risk of death. With the adjustment for so- cioeconomic status, an average current male drinker at age 65 could expect to live 1.65 years longer in total and 1.84 years longer without disability than lifelong abstainers. However, we can’t reliably estimate alcohol effects on older Chinese females.

Conclusions: Since there is little doubt that heavy drinking is detrimental to health, our results provide evidence supporting an association between light to moderate alcohol consumption and reduced mortality. The recommendation of zero alcohol consump- tion might not be well-justified in the contemporary Chinese context. The importance of alcohol intake in evaluating population health should be taken into account when predicting future health care burdens.

Keywords: Alcohol drinking; All-cause mortality; IMaCh; Life expectancy

 

Age-Dependent Risk Aversion: Re-evaluating Fiscal Policy Impacts of Population Ageing
Working Papers

Age-Dependent Risk Aversion: Re-evaluating Fiscal Policy Impacts of Population Ageing

Phitawat Poonpolkul

Abstract: Background: Results of research into the effects of alcohol drinking on population health are inconsistent. Some studies suggest that light to moderate alcohol consump- tion can have a protective effect on morbidity and mortality. But others challenge this view and claim that alcohol use could lead to health loss regardless of the amount. We contribute evidence to this debate by investigating the association between alcohol drinking and all-cause mortality among older adults in China.

Methods: We use nationally representative samples from the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey and the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study. Cox regressions compare ever drinkers who had been exposed to alcohol at some time and lifelong abstainers. We then subdivide ever drinkers into former drinkers who had stopped drinking and current drinkers who were still consuming alcohol. Cox results are supplemented with the interpolated Markov chain approach to calculate total and disability-free life expectancy.

Results: Among older males, ever drinkers seemed to have similar mortality risks to lifelong abstainers. Compared to abstinence, mortality was elevated for former male drinkers, although the effects were generally insignificant. Current male drinkers aged between 65 and 85 had a significantly lower risk of death. With the adjustment for so- cioeconomic status, an average current male drinker at age 65 could expect to live 1.65 years longer in total and 1.84 years longer without disability than lifelong abstainers. However, we can’t reliably estimate alcohol effects on older Chinese females.

Conclusions: Since there is little doubt that heavy drinking is detrimental to health, our results provide evidence supporting an association between light to moderate alcohol consumption and reduced mortality. The recommendation of zero alcohol consump- tion might not be well-justified in the contemporary Chinese context. The importance of alcohol intake in evaluating population health should be taken into account when predicting future health care burdens.

Keywords: Alcohol drinking; All-cause mortality; IMaCh; Life expectancy

 

Research Publications

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

Hanewald, K., Bateman, H., Fang, H., and Wu, S. (2020). Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization. 169, p.19-37.

Research Publications

Estimating prevalence of subjective cognitive decline in and across international cohort studies of aging: A COSMIC study

Rohr, S., Pabst, A., Riedel-Heller, S.G., Jessen, F., Turana, Y., Handajani, Y.S., Brayne, C., Matthews, F.E., Stephan, B.C.M., Lipton, R.B., Katz, M.J., Wang, C., Guerchet, M., Preux, P.M., Mbelesso, P., Ritchie, K., Ancelin, M.L., Carriere, I., Guaita, A., Davin, A., Vaccaro, R., Kim, K.W., Han, J.W., Suh, S.W., Shahar, S., Din, N.C., Vanoh, D., van Boxtel, M., Kohler, S., Ganguli, M., Jacobsen, E.P., Snitz, B.E., Anstey, K.J., Cherbuin, N., Kumagai, S., Chen, S., Narazaki, K., Ng, T.P., Gao, Q., Gwee, X., Brodaty, H., Kochan, N.A., Trollor, J., Lobo, A., Lopez-Anton, R., Santabarbara, J., Crawford, J.D., Lipnicki, D.M., Sachdev, P.S.; for Cohort Studies of Memory in an International Consortium (COSMIC). (2020). Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy. 12(1), 167.

Research Publications

Introduction to the Special Issue on Population Ageing in Australia

Piggott, J. (2020). Australian Population Studies. 4(1), 1-3.

Research Publications

Higher Diastolic Blood Pressure Aged 40-44 is Associated with Declining Cognition and Increasing White Matter Lesions Over 8-12 Year Follow Up

Peters R, Xu Y, Cherbuin N, Sachdev PS, Anstey KJ. (2020). Alzheimer's Dement. 16(s10), e045656. (Abstract)

Research Publications

Subjective Memory Decline and Neuropsychological Performance

Xu, Y., Peters, R., Eramudugolla, R. and Anstey, K.J. (2020). Alzheimer's Dement. 16(s10), e045656.

 

The Chinese Pension System
Working Papers

Incidence of Capital Income Taxation in a Lifecycle Economy with Firm Heterogeneity

Chung Tran and Sebastian Wende

Abstract: We study the incidence of capital income taxation in a dynamic general equilibrium model with heterogeneous firms and lifecycle households. In this incomplete market setting, marginal excess burdens of three capital taxes, namely corporate income, dividend and capital gains taxes, are vastly different due to heterogeneous responses of firms and households, and heterogeneous effects of general equilibrium adjustments. It is indeed important to account for firm heterogeneity in productivity and investment financing as well as household heterogeneity in age and skill. Overall, taxing capital with a corporate income tax at the firm level results in higher excess burden than taxing capital with dividend and capital gains taxes at the household level. Given the existing U.S. tax treatment for capital income, reforms that shift tax burden from the firm to household side potentially result in efficiency gains and overall welfare improving. However, the welfare benefits of the tax reforms are quite different across households and generations over transition time, depending on skill, age-cohort and budget balancing tax instruments. In particular, majority of currently alive households, especially retirees, experience welfare gains under moderate corporate income tax cuts, but suffer from welfare losses under more radical tax cuts.

Keywords: Excess burden; Tax incidence; Distributional effects; Overlapping generations; Dynamic general equilibrium

 

Research Publications

Aging labor, ICT Capital, and Productivity in Japan and Korea.

Lee, J.W., Kwak, D.W. and Song, E. (2020). Aging labor, ICT Capital, and Productivity in Japan and Korea. Journal of the Japanese and International Economies. 58(2020). Article ID 101095.

Dr Miguel Olivo-Villabrille
Working Papers

The Marital Earnings Premium: An IV Approach

Miguel Olivo-Villabrille 

Abstract:  Numerous studies find that married men earn more than single men. However, identifying whether and why marriage a↵ects earnings is complicated by the fact that marriage market outcomes are jointly determined with potential earnings. As such, I exploit exogenous variation in marriage induced by the introduction of no-fault divorce laws in the US. I find a 38% causal increase of marriage on earnings of husbands. This increase in earnings is explained by a large increase in labor market work after marriage. My findings are robust to the possibility of unobserved heterogeneity in the effect of marriage on earnings across individuals.

Keywords: Marital earnings premium, marriage, divorce laws, local average treatment effects.

 

 

Research Publications

Align your job with yourself: The relationship between a job crafting intervention and work engagement, and the role of workload.

Kuijpers, E., Kooij, D. T., & van Woerkom, M. (2020). Journal of Occupational Health Psychology. 25(1), 1-16.

Research Publications

Flicking the switch: Simplifying disclosure to improve retirement plan choices

Thorp, S., H, Bateman., L, I, Dobrescu., B, R, Newell. and A, Ortmann. (2020). Journal of Banking and Finance. 

Research Publications

The impact of smoking and obesity on disability-free life expectancy in older Australians

Kingston, A., Byles, J., Kiely, K., Anstey, K., and Jagger, C. (2020). The Journals of Gerontology: Series A, Glaa290.

Research Publications

Cohort profile update: The PATH through life project

Anstey, K. J., Butterworth, P., Christensen, H., Easteal, S., Cherbuin, N., Leach, L., Burns, R., Kiely, K. M., Mortby, M. E., Eramudugolla, R., Gad, I. (2020). International Journal of Epidemiology. 

Research Publications

Discrimination and disability: types of discrimination and association with trust, self-efficacy and life satisfaction among older Australians.

Temple, J., Kelaher, M., Brooke, L., Utomo, A., and Williams, R. (2020). Australasian Journal on Ageing. 39 (2), 112-130.

 

Research Publications

Substitutional effect of long-term care to hospital inpatient care?

Lu, B., Mi, H., Yan, G., Lim, J.K. and Feng, G. (2020). China Economic Review. p.101-466.

Research Publications

Falls and impact on disability and healthy life expectancy in China: Evidence from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Survey (CHARLS)

Lu, B., Yang, M., Cumming, R.G. and Stanaway, F.F. (2020). China Economic Review. 61.

Research Publications

Administrative boundaries and demographic knowledge: General issues and a case-study for Italy

Dalla Zuana, G., Rossi, F. and McDonald, P. (2020). Popolazione e storia. 21(1).

 

Research Publications

Discrimination reported by older Adults living with mental health conditions: types, contexts and association with healthcare barriers

Temple, J., Brijnath, B., Enticott, J., Utomo, A., Williams, R. and Kelaher, M. (2020). Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology.

Research Publications

The geographical patterns of birth seasonality in Australia

Wilson, T., McDonald, P. and Temple, J. (2020). Demographic Research, 43 (40): 1185-1198

Mortality Improvement Rates: Modeling, Parameter Uncertainty and Robustness
Working Papers

Mortality Improvement Rates: Modeling, Parameter Uncertainty and Robustness

Andrew Hunt and Andrés M. Villegas

Abstract: Rather than looking at the mortality rates directly, a number of recent academic studies have looked at modeling rates of improvement in mortality when making mortality projections. Although relatively new in the academic literature, the use of mortality improvement rates has a long-standing tradition in actuarial practice when allowing for improvements in mortality from standard motality tables. However, mortality improvement rates are dificult to estimate robustly and models of them are subject to high levels of parameter uncertainty, since they are derived by dividing one uncertain quantity by another. Despite this, the studies of mortality improvement rates to date have not investigated parameter uncertainty due to the ad hoc methods used to fit the models to historical data. In this study, we adapt the Poisson model for the numbers of deaths at each age and year, proposed in Brouhns et al. [Insurance: Mathematics and Economics 3 (2002) 31] to model mortality improvement rates. This enables models of improvement rates to be fitted using standard maximum likelihood techniques and allows parameter uncetainty to be investigated using a standard bootstrapping approach. We illustrate the proposed modeling approach using data for the England and Wales population.

Keywords: Mortality Improvements; Mortality forecasting; Parameter uncertainty; Robustness