Health Education and the Postretirement Evolution of Household Assets

Working Paper: NBER ID: w18695

Authors: James M. Poterba; Steven F. Venti; David A. Wise

Abstract: This paper explores the relationship between education and the evolution of wealth after retirement. Asset growth following retirement depends in part on health capital and financial capital accumulated prior to retirement, which in turn are strongly related to educational attainment. These "initial conditions" for retirement can have a lingering effect on subsequent asset evolution. Our aim is to disentangle the effects of education on post-retirement asset evolution that operate through health and financial capital accumulated prior to retirement from the effects of education that impinge directly on asset evolution after retirement. We consider the indirect effect of education through financial resources--in particular Social Security benefits and defined benefit pension benefits--and through health capital that was accumulated before retirement. We also consider the direct effect of education on asset growth following retirement, emphasizing the correlation between education and the returns households earn on their post-retirement investments. Households with different levels of education invest, on average, in different assets, and they may consequently earn different rates of return. Finally, we consider the additional effects of education that are not captured through these pathways. Our empirical findings suggest a substantial association between education and the evolution of assets. For example, for two person households the growth of assets between 1998 and 2008 is on average much greater for college graduates than for those with less than a high school degree. This difference ranges from about $82,000 in the lowest asset quintile to over $600,000 in the highest.

Keywords: health; education; household assets; retirement

JEL Codes: E21; I14; I24


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
health capital (I15)asset evolution post-retirement (G51)
financial resources (G53)asset evolution post-retirement (G51)
education (I29)asset growth (G19)
education (I29)returns on post-retirement investments (G11)
preretirement earnings (J26)social security benefits (H55)
social security benefits (H55)asset spend-down decisions (D14)
education (I29)asset allocation (G11)
education (I29)unmeasured influences on asset evolution (G19)
education (I29)health capital (I15)
education (I29)financial resources (G53)

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