Technology, labour market institutions and early retirement: evidence from Finland

Among various barriers to increasing employment of older workers, this paper focuses on two notable ones that are relevant for the future of work. First, older workers engaged in codifiable, routine tasks are particularly prone to the risk of being displaced by computers and robots. Second, several...

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Veröffentlicht in:IDEAS Working Paper Series from RePEc 2021-03 (1659), p.0_1-35
Hauptverfasser: Yashiro, Naomitsu, Kyyrä, Tomi, Hwang, Hyunjeong, Tuomala, Juha
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creator Yashiro, Naomitsu
Kyyrä, Tomi
Hwang, Hyunjeong
Tuomala, Juha
description Among various barriers to increasing employment of older workers, this paper focuses on two notable ones that are relevant for the future of work. First, older workers engaged in codifiable, routine tasks are particularly prone to the risk of being displaced by computers and robots. Second, several countries have in place various labour market institutions that encourage early retirement, such as exceptional entitlements or looser criteria for unemployment and disability benefits applied to older individuals. This paper presents evidence that these two factors reinforce each other to push older workers out of employment. It is found that older workers who are more exposed to digital technologies are more likely to leave employment, and that this effect is significantly magnified when they are eligible to an extension of unemployment benefits until they start drawing old age pension. Furthermore, a simple simulation based on the empirical findings illustrates that a reform that tightens the eligibility for the benefit extension would increase mostly the employment of older workers that are more exposed to digital technologies.
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subjects Age
Automation
COVID-19
Digital technology
Early retirement
Economic growth
Employers
Employment
Labor market
Older workers
Robots
Skills
technological change
Technology
Technology adoption
Unemployment benefits
Younger workers
title Technology, labour market institutions and early retirement: evidence from Finland
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