The Canadian National Retirement Risk Index: Employing Statistics Canada's LifePaths to Measure the Financial Security of Future Canadian Seniors

This article measures a Canadian National Retirement Risk Index (NRRI). Originally developed by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, the NRRI is a forward-looking measure that evaluates the proportion of working-aged individuals who are at risk of not maintaining their standard of l...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian public policy 2011-02, Vol.37 (Supplement 1), p.S73-S94
Hauptverfasser: MacDonald, Bonnie-Jeanne, Moore, Kevin D., Chen, He, Brown, Robert L.
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container_end_page S94
container_issue Supplement 1
container_start_page S73
container_title Canadian public policy
container_volume 37
creator MacDonald, Bonnie-Jeanne
Moore, Kevin D.
Chen, He
Brown, Robert L.
description This article measures a Canadian National Retirement Risk Index (NRRI). Originally developed by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, the NRRI is a forward-looking measure that evaluates the proportion of working-aged individuals who are at risk of not maintaining their standard of living in retirement. The Canadian retirement income system has been very effective in reducing elderly poverty, but our results suggest that it has been much less successful in maintaining the living standards of Canadians after retirement. Since the earlier years of the new millennium, we find that approximately one-third of retiring Canadians have been unable to maintain their working-age consumption after retirement—a trend that is projected to worsen significantly for future Canadian retirees. The release of the Canadian NRRI is timely given the widespread concern that the current Canadian retirement income system is inadequate. Many proposals have recently emerged to extend and/or enhance Canadian public pensions, and the NRRI is a tool to test their merit. The methodology underlying the Canadian NRRI is uniquely sophisticated and comprehensive on account of our employment of Statistics Canada's LifePaths, a state-of-the-art stochastic microsimulation model of the Canadian population. For instance, the Canadian NRRI is novel in that it models all of the relevant sources of consumption before and after retirement, while accounting for important features that are typically neglected in retirement adequacy studies such as family size, the variation of consumption over a person's lifetime, and the heterogeneity among the life courses of individuals.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Income
Older people
Personal finance
Retirement
Retirement income
Standard of living
Studies
title The Canadian National Retirement Risk Index: Employing Statistics Canada's LifePaths to Measure the Financial Security of Future Canadian Seniors
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