Abstract
We investigate whether a lack of planning and future-orientation in financial behavior is associated with a higher mortality risk. Our evidence is based on two nationally representative cohorts of older people living in the United States (n = 11,478) and England (n = 11,298), where we compared individuals’ self-reported planning horizons on spending and saving with government mortality records. Controlling for demographics, participants with a 1 SD shorter planning horizon had a 9% greater hazard of dying in the English sample (evaluated over 10 years), and a 7% greater hazard in the US sample (over 22 years). These differences in mortality risk could not be explained by variation in respondent’s life expectancy, their financial circumstances or a range of other observable covariates. Similar results are found for self-reported health, with the positive association between longer planning horizons and health strongest for those with fewest financial resources.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference37 articles.
1. Social determinants of health inequalities;M. Marmot;The Lancet,2005
2. The Association Between Income and Life Expectancy in the United States, 2001–2014;R Chetty;JAMA,2016
3. The Determinants of Mortality;D Cutler;Journal of Economic Perspectives,2006
4. Golden eggs and hyperbolic discounting;D. Laibson;Quarterly Journal of Economics,1997
5. Can Americans Afford to Retire? New Evidence on Retirement Saving Adequacy;OS Mitchell;©The Journal of Risk and Insurance,1998