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The Asset Cost of Poor Health

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2011

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John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
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Poterba, James M., Steven F. Venti, and David A. Wise. 2011. The Asset Cost of Poor Health. HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series RWP11-005, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

Abstract

This paper examines the correlation between poor health and asset accumulation for households in the first nine waves of the Health and Retirement Survey. Rather than enumerating the specific costs of poor health, such as out of pocket medical expenses or lost earnings, we estimate how the evolution of household assets is related to poor health. We construct a simple measure of health status based on the first principal component of HRS survey responses on self-reported health status, diagnoses, ADLs, IADL, and other indicators of underlying health. Our estimates suggest large and substantively important correlations between poor health and asset accumulation. We compare persons in each 1992 asset quintile who were in the top third of the 1992 distribution of latent health with those in the same 1992 asset quintile who were in the bottom third of the latent health distribution. By 2008, those in the top third of the health distribution had accumulated, on average, more than 50 percent more assets than those in the bottom third of the health distribution. This “asset cost of poor health” appears to be larger for persons with substantial 1992 asset balances than for those with lower balances.

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SUP - Social and Urban Policy, Health, Health Economics, Retirement Economics

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