This renewal will continue the analysis of the determinants of individual households' savings, but it will focus on how individual behavior will respond to potential changes in public policy. In particular, the projects' findings will be used to analyze the effect of potential changes in Social Security, Medicare, and disability insurance. A major aim of the program project is hence to use the analysis of the individual households' behavior to project the consequences of changes in public policy impinging on health and retirement. The program project has two cores and three projects. The Administrative Core (continuing Core A) will provide overall administrative support for the entire project. It will also provide support for research coordination and dissemination. The Database Core (continuing Core B) will continue to work on methods for improving the wealth data in the HRS and on issues of survey design (bracketing, question order, anchoring) that impinge on the preference and expectational measures as well as the wealth measures. The three projects include: (1) preference parameter project (continuing Project) will develop new measures quantifying the altruism and labor supply of individuals and extend the analysis of the existing parameters relating to risk tolerance. These estimates will be used to study bequests, portfolio choices, and the interaction between the retirement and wealth accumulation decision. (2) The earnings dynamics project (new Project 7) will use HRS Social Security earnings history to estimate the stochastic process followed by labor income. Such estimates are of interest in themselves, particularly in what they reveal about the persistence of shocks to earnings. The earnings process project will also make them the subject of analysis. It will treat the stochastic process for earnings a consequence of choices made by individuals instead of something exogenous. It will also examine how individuals adjust their consumption, saving, and labor supply follow shocks to earnings. And (3) the earnings expectations project (new Project 8) will collect and analyze probabilistic expectations data related to economic insecurity and lifetime earnings expectations and will integrate these measures with explicit questions bout the behavioral response to changes in Social Security and Medicare benefits.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
2P01AG010179-04A1
Application #
2631324
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAG1-BJB-1 (J1))
Project Start
1992-09-21
Project End
2001-03-31
Budget Start
1998-09-30
Budget End
1999-03-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Department
Biostatistics & Other Math Sci
Type
Organized Research Units
DUNS #
791277940
City
Ann Arbor
State
MI
Country
United States
Zip Code
48109
Shapiro, Matthew D; Slemrod, Joel (2009) Did the 2008 Tax Rebates Stimulate Spending? Am Econ Rev 99:374-379
Kimball, Miles; Weil, Philippe (2009) Precautionary Saving and Consumption Smoothing Across Time and Possibilities. J Money Credit Bank 41:245-284
Kimball, Miles S; Sahm, Claudia R; Shapiro, Matthew D (2008) Imputing Risk Tolerance From Survey Responses. J Am Stat Assoc 103:1028-1038