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Health care utilization at retirement: The role of the opportunity cost of time

63

Citations

32

References

2018

Year

TLDR

The study investigates the causal impact of retirement on health‑care utilization using SHARE data from 10 European countries. It finds that retirement increases doctor visits, with the rise growing over time and varying by gender and prior work patterns, reflecting a lower opportunity cost of time.

Abstract

Abstract We investigate the causal impact of retirement on health care utilization using SHARE data for 10 European countries. We show that the number of doctor's visits and the probability of visiting a doctor more than four times a year (our measures of health care utilization) increase after retirement. The increase in health care utilization is found to depend mainly on the years spent in retirement, suggesting that adjustment may take time. We find evidence of heterogeneous effects by gender and across different patterns of time use prior to retirement (i.e., working long hours and combined work and out‐of‐work activities). Overall, the empirical findings suggest that the increase in health care utilization is consistent with the decrease in the opportunity cost of time faced by individuals when they retire.

References

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