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Income and Life Satisfaction Among Voluntary vs. Involuntary Retirees

Date Issued
August 1, 2010
Author(s)
Baxter, Lauren Elizabeth  
Advisor(s)
Eric Sundstrom
Additional Advisor(s)
John Lounsbury
Richard Saudargas
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/43197
Abstract

This field study examined relationships of income and life satisfaction among retirees, their perceptions of whether their decisions to retire were voluntary or involuntary, and their stated reasons for retiring: “push” (to exit unsustainable work situations) or “pull” (to pursue more attractive options). Based on prior research, hypotheses predicted that voluntary / involuntary choice would moderate the relationship of income and life satisfaction, and that the relationship would vary as a function of "push" vs. "pull" reasons for retiring. A screened, national sample of 1,043 U.S. retirees completed an online survey that assessed satisfaction with multiple life domains, reason for retiring, demographic characteristics, family income, and perceived financial control. Results showed that voluntary retirees had, on average, higher income, life satisfaction, and perceived financial control than those who saw their retirements as involuntary. Type of reason for retirement did moderate the relationship between income and life satisfaction, but in an unexpected way. Based on decades of research on the relationship of control and stress, the hypothesis predicted the correlation between income and life satisfaction would be weakest in voluntary "pull" retirees, and strongest in the involuntary group. Instead, the relationship was strongest among voluntary "push" retirees (r=+.35). These surprising results highlight the importance of further research on perceived control over retirement on common predictors of life satisfaction in retirement.

Subjects

retirement

life satisfaction

push and pull factors...

income

Disciplines
Industrial and Organizational Psychology
Degree
Master of Arts
Major
Psychology
Embargo Date
December 1, 2011
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

BaxterThesis_21May2010.pdf

Size

190.74 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

689e6a4162fa5f07daca4590583ac15a

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