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    J Gerontol. 1994 Sep;49(5):S219-30.

    The relationship between retirement life cycle changes and older men's labor force participation rates.

    Hayward MD, Crimmins EM, Wray LA.

    Department of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University.

    This study probes the utility of older men's labor force participation rates (LFPRs) as indicators of the work-to-retirement transition. Specific attention is directed at how shifts in the retirement life cycle are related to LFPRs. Based on Current Population Survey data for the 1970s, a life table modeling approach showed that LFPRs are relatively weak indicators of the work-to-retirement transition. This was demonstrated by the relative stability in older men's age profiles of LFPRs despite significant changes in the timing and "organization" of the work-to-retirement transition. The 1970s evidenced a contraction of the main career and the expansion of both post-retirement work activity and retirement, yet none of these changes substantially altered the age profiles of older men's labor force participation rates.

    PMID: 8056951 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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