Early retired or automatized? Evidence from the survey of health, ageing and retirement in Europe
Loading...
Publication date
Advisors
Department
Research group
Center
Abstract
This paper measures the implications of the automation process in the labour market for the early retirement
decisions in 26 European countries. In order to perform the analysis, we use microdata from the Survey of Health,
Ageing and Retirement in Europe, occupation-level data on automation degree and automation risk and a
technological classification of occupations in 4 terrains. We find that the current technological change is playing a
significant role in the early retirement decisions, although it affects heterogeneously certain groups in the sample
(regarding gender, education level and job status). This fact leads to a contradiction between governments trying
to delay retirement ages and labour markets trying to expel workers earlier. Therefore, we conclude that, in order
to elaborate policies on ageing and retirement, the effect of new labour-saving technologies in older worker’s
decisions must be taken into account. We propose that the delay in statutory retirement ages should be
accompanied by training programs and/or policies promoting self-employment for workers at risk of ending their
working lives prematurely. Furthermore, the programs aimed to relocate middle-age workers displaced from
their original occupations should focus on finding a new occupation among those which are less affected by
automation processes.
Keywords
Unesco Subjects
Bibliographic citation
Casas, P., & Román, C. (2023). Early retired or automatized? Evidence from the survey of health, ageing and retirement in Europe. In The Journal of the Economics of Ageing (Vol. 24, p. 100443). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeoa.2023.100443














