Retirement and Cognitive Development: Are the Retired Really Inactive?

Andries De grip, Arnaud Dupuy, Jelle Jolles, Martin Van boxtel

    Résultats de recherche: Papier de travailWorking paper

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    Résumé

    This paper uses longitudinal test data to analyze the relation between retirement and cognitive development. Controlling for individual fixed effects and lagged cognition, we find that retirees face greater declines in information processing speed than those who remain employed. However, remarkably, their cognitive flexibility declines less, an effect that appears to be persistent 6 years after retirement. Both effects of retirement on cognitive development are comparable to the effect of a five to six-year age difference. Controlling for changes in blood pressure, which are negatively related to cognitive flexibility, we still find lower declines in cognitive flexibility for retirees. Since the decline in information processing speed after retirement holds particularly for the low educated, activating these persons after retirement could lower the social costs of an aging society.
    langue originaleAnglais
    ÉditeurCEPS/INSTEAD
    Nombre de pages40
    étatPublié - 2013

    Série de publications

    NomWorking Papers
    EditeurCEPS/INSTEAD
    Numéro2013-11

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