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THE ECONOMIC WELL‐BEING OF THE ELDERLY
85
Citations
18
References
1990
Year
Quality Of LifePolicy ImportanceIncome SecurityIncome DistributionEconomics Of AgingPopulation AgingHealthy AgingFinancial SecurityHousehold FinanceInternational RedistributionPublic HealthEconomic InequalityStatisticsRelative Economic Well‐beingSocial InequalityEconomicsPublic PolicyHousehold StudiesGeriatricsThe ElderlyGlobal AgingEconomic DemographyElderly WellbeingFamily EconomicsPopulation InequalityRetirement StudiesDemographyMedicineHousehold EconomicsHousehold Income
Estimating the elderly's relative economic well‐being is of policy importance, but the procedure poses several technical problems. We propose a methodology for such comparison and present results from its application. Household income of persons is adjusted for household size, underreporting of unearned income, and the annuitized value of assets. By this measure, the elderly are on average 124 percent as well off as the nonelderly. Their households are on average 183 percent as well off as those of children under 6. Inequality is greater than at any other age and increases further for those over 75.
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