4.0 Article

Impacts of voluntary and involuntary workforce transitions at mature ages: Longitudinal evidence from HILDA

Journal

AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL ON AGEING
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages 11-16

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajag.12468

Keywords

impacts; involuntary; mature ages; voluntary; workforce transitions

Funding

  1. Australian ARC Centre of Excellence in Population Ageing Research (CEPAR) at the Australian National University
  2. Centre for Research on Ageing Health and Wellbeing (CRAHW) at the Australian National University

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ObjectiveTo assess the changes in health, well-being and welfare dependency associated with yearly workforce transitions from working to not working among people aged 45-64years. MethodsTransition analysis of the nationally representative longitudinal data from the Household Incomes and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey 2002-2011. ResultsPeople who voluntarily left paid work had reasonable control over their situations, and their satisfaction remained relatively stable even with deteriorating health and increasing welfare dependency. Those who involuntarily left paid work had less control and preparedness, and they experienced significant decreases in their satisfaction with life overall, finances and health; they were also more likely to be psychologically distressed, welfare dependent and had a higher probability to return to paid work. ConclusionVoluntary and involuntary workforce transitions have different impacts on health and well-being. Enabling mature aged workers to work longer can yield benefits for both individual well-being and government budgets. Policy Impact: Policies need to take account of the different consequences of voluntary and involuntary workforce transitions at mature ages for individuals and governments.

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