Seminar in Public Economics - Increasing life expectancy and life satisfaction: Are longer lives worth it?
Wann
Montag, 13. November 2017
17 bis 18:30 Uhr
Wo
F425
Veranstaltet von
Lehrstuhl für Wirtschafts- und Sozialpolitik
Vortragende Person/Vortragende Personen:
Janina Nemitz (Universität Zürich)
"Increasing life expectancy and life satisfaction: Are longer lives worth it?"
Abstract:
Human longevity is rising rapidly across the industrialized world, but are longer lives more satis-
fied lives? The results of this study suggest that the answer is no. Despite living longer, people
did not become better off in terms of overall life satisfaction. When compared to 1985, in 2010
people were, on average, much less satisfied throughout their final period of life. Moreover, they
were expected to spend a larger proportion of their lives dissatisfied. Two important mechanisms, which explain these findings, are health and social isolation. The empirical approach,
which gives rise to these results, is twofold. First, I analyze time trends of average life satisfaction and background characteristics for West German elderly who are within five years of death.
Second, I estimate satisfied and dissatisfied life expectancies at age 60 at different points in time to test whether the increase in lifetime compensated for the deterioration of the final period of life. Several sensitivity checks indicate that compositional changes in the population over time, cohort effects, time-in-panel effects, and a simple aging-unrelated time trend in life satisfaction are unlikely to explain the above results.