Subjective survival probabilities and life tables: Evidence from Europe
Understanding the variability of survival probabilities, both between and within cohorts, is important to economists who study life-cycle decisions under uncertainty. In this paper we analyze the subjective probabilities of survival to specific target ages provided by respondents to the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). To evaluate how these probabilities compare with objective data from life tables, and avoid the problems associated with a naive use of period life tables, we construct cohort life tables from the sequence of period life tables available in the Human Mortality Database and use them to compute actuarial probabilities of survival to the same target ages. We find that male subjective survival probabilities are close to the probabilities computed from the cohort life tables, whereas female subjective probabilities are always lower. We also find that subjective survival probabilities are on average higher for more educated people, those whose household income is higher, and those with better health. This evidence suggests that both income and health matter for own assessments of subjective survival.
Year of publication: |
2010
|
---|---|
Authors: | Peracchi, Franco ; Perotti, Valeria |
Institutions: | Istituto Einaudi per l'Economia e la Finanza (EIEF) |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Distributional vs. Quantile Regression
Koenker, Roger, (2013)
-
Bayesian Model Averaging for Generalized Linear Models with Missing Covariates
Dardanoni, Valentino, (2013)
-
Mazzonna, Fabrizio, (2014)
- More ...