Factors Influencing Retirement Timing among Immigrants

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Factors Influencing Retirement Timing among Immigrants Jorge Uriarte-Landa, My-Phuong Van and Benoît-Paul Hébert Policy Research Directorate, ESDC CRDCN Conference Waterloo, October 2013 The views expressed in this presentation are the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of ESDC or of the federal government.

Issue understudied Extensive Canadian literature on retirement but few studies focused on immigrants About one-fourth of older workers are immigrants and this share is growing important in the context of an aging workforce Some research suggesting that, relative to the Canadianborn, immigrants: Retire, or expect to retire, later Are less financially prepared for retirement Less is known, however, about more specific factors influencing retirement 2

What explains these differences? Proportion ever retired, by age 1 Men Canadian-born 1 Women.9 Immigrants.9.8.8.7.7.6.6.5.5.4.4.3.3.2.2.1.1 0 0 50 55 60 65 70 Age 50 55 60 65 70 Age Kaplan-Meier estimates, GSS 2007. 3

Goal and research questions Goal To shed light on the factors influencing retirement timing among immigrants. Research questions What factors appear to precipitate/delay retirement among immigrants? Do factors influencing retirement (work experience, education) have the same effects for immigrants and the Canadian-born? Are immigrant-specific characteristics (e.g. age of arrival) important? 4

Data source General Social Survey on Family, Social Support and Retirement (Cycle 21, 2007) - 23,000 respondents 45+ Information on immigrant status & characteristics such as age at arrival, country of birth & first childhood language Retrospective information on nature/timing of several events (retirement, work interruptions, family and caregiving histories) Limitations No retrospective information on some important factors (e.g., job characteristics, financial circumstances, health) Lack of data on immigrant class (e.g. economic, family refugee) & official language proficiency at arrival 5

Definitions Immigrants: Born abroad & ever landed immigrant Retirees: Ever retired from a job or business or main activity in last 12 months was retired Retirement transition: First retirement during ages 50-65 Group at risk: Started working full-time between ages 15 and 49, working at age 50, and never retired before age 50 Excluded: Proxy respondents & those aged 85+ Immigrants who were older than 50 when they arrived in Canada 6

Method Event History Analysis (EHA) Piecewise exponential models to estimate the effect of independent variables on the risk of retiring ( hazard ) h i 65 t h t exp x it β h t exp 0 Hazard: Limiting probability of retiring at a given age conditional upon not having retired before that age 0 t 50 t d t Three pooled models (men and women together): Models Sample size Immigrant models (two) 1,500 Canadian-born model 7,400 7

Method - Variables included in EHA models All Models Immigrant Models (additional variables) Work experience* Model 1 Highest level of schooling Age of arrival First childhood language Marital status/gender* Visible minority Death of partner* Presence and age of children* Model 2 Informal caregiving* Age of arrival Region of birth Region of residence Urban/rural Birth cohort Economic downturn* * Time varying variable 8

Descriptive statistics (I) Immigrants Canadian-born % Female 44 47 University degree 35 26 Ontario 61 34 Urban(CMA/CA) 93 77 Born during 1948-57 47 50 At age 50: Married 84 79 Child(ren) aged 0-17 48 36 Informal care to family 9 16 Years Work experience (average) 25.0 27.1 shaded cells are signif. different from the Canadian-born at 0.05 level Source: Statistics Canada, General Social Survey, 2007 9

Descriptive statistics (II) Immigrants % Arrived during 1950-1999 94 Age of arrival <13 18 13 to 19 13 20 to 34 51 35 to 49 18 Region of birth UK/Ireland 17 Other Europe 41 Asia, S/C America, Caribbean & Africa 36 US, Oceania & Other 6 Visible minority 31 First childhood language English 34 French 3 Other 63 Source: Statistics Canada, General Social Survey, 2007 10

Findings from multivariate analysis 11

Risk of retirement generally increases with age Predicted risk of transitioning into first retirement (baseline)* * For white married male, in Ontario CMA, born 1938-47, univ. deg., had child aged 24+ & over 30 years of work exp. by age 50, never a caregiver, never exp. partner death &, if immigrant, arrived at age 24, did not speak E/F as 1st language. 12

... and with work experience 13

However, risk does not seem to vary with educational attainment Among Canadian-born workers, university graduates are more likely to retire, but no such difference among immigrants Possible contributing factor: discounting of foreign education, (i.e. education not leading to better earnings/jobs and, thereby, higher ability to save for retirement) Immigrant Canadian-born Highest level of schooling High school or less (ref) 1.00 1.00 Postsecondary, no degree 0.84 1.03 University degree 0.94 1.23 shaded cells are signif. different from ref. group at 0.05 level 14

Risk of retirement highest for married women 15

Presence of children associated with delayed retirement 16

Spouse death and informal care associated with higher risk of retiring Immigrant Canadian-born Hazard Ratios Experiencing death of spouse/partner No (ref) 1.00 1.00 Yes 2.21 1.74 Providing informal care to family member No (ref) 1.00 1.00 Yes 1.47 1.19 shaded cells are signif. different from ref. group at 0.05 level 17

Age of arrival: The older you arrive, the later you retire 18

Variations by first childhood language and visible minority status Not speaking English or French as mother tongue linked to 18% lower risk of retiring Risk of retirement about 1.3 times higher for visible minorities 19

Differences by region of birth (Alternative model specification) 20

Immigrants from UK/Ireland appeared to retire sooner 21

Additional results In line with results for Canadian-born model: Risk of retiring lowest for most recent birth cohort (1948-1957) No statistically significant differences for other variables (region of residence, urban/rural, and economic downturns) 22

Summary (I) For Canadian-born and immigrant older workers, the following factors were associated with an higher risk of retirement: work experience being a married woman informal caregiving death of spouse/partner The presence of children is associated with a lower risk of retiring (except children 24+ among the Canadian-born) 23

Summary (II) In contrast to the Canadian-born: educational attainment does not have a significant influence on timing of retirement for immigrants age pattern appears to be somewhat different Immigrant-specific characteristics matter age of arrival 1 st childhood language visible minority region of birth 24