Elderly immigrants' labor supply response to Supplemental Security Income
Elderly immigrants' labor supply response to Supplemental Security Income
Kaushal
Neeraj
Kaushal, Neeraj
Author
Author
text
working paper
Chestnut Hill, Mass. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College20092009monographic
Chestnut Hill, Mass.
Chestnut Hill, Mass.
Center for Retirement Research at Boston College
2009
2009
monographic
Englisheng
English
eng
electronicapplication/pdfborn digital
electronic
application/pdf
born digital
This paper examines the effect of changes in immigrant eligibility for Supplemental Security Income in 1996 on the employment and retirement behaviors of foreign-born elderly persons. I find that denial of SSI was associated with a 5 percentage point (15 percent) increase in the employment of non-citizen elderly men and a 5.6 percentage point (11 percent) decrease in their retirement rate. The estimated effects were higher for recent arrivals, a group most likely to be affected by the policy change. Further, while recent arrivals were more likely to increase part-time work, the earlier arrivals responded to the policy by increasing full-time employment. I find no consistent evidence that denial of SSI affected the employment of elderly immigrant women, but some evidence that it raised their retirement rate, specifically among those who immigrated in recent years.
Neeraj Kaushal.
CRR WP2008-25
CRR WP2008-25
CRR WP
2008-25
http://crr.bc.edu/images/stories/Working_Papers/wp_2008-25.pdf
MChBEnglisheng
MChB
Englisheng
English
eng