Autori:
Belloni, Michele,
Lugova, Alexandra,
Legendre, Bérangère,
Tangury, JeremyTitolo:
Working Longer, Feeling Worse? How Job Quality Shapes the Mental Health Toll of Delayed RetirementPeriodico:
Università degli studi di Torino. Dip. Di Economia e Statistica Cognetti de Martiis. Working paper seriesAnno:
2025 - Volume:
3 - Fascicolo:
2 - Pagina iniziale:
1 - Pagina finale:
45This paper examines the impact of delayed retirement, induced by
pension reforms, on late-career mental health, focusing on working
conditions. While studies have analyzed aspects of job quality — such as
high-strain roles and automation risk — none have considered the full range
of job characteristics shaping workers’ experiences. We address this gap by
analyzing six key dimensions of job quality: skills and discretion, working
time quality, physical environment, social environment, work intensity, and
career prospects. To mitigate endogeneity concerns associated with self-
reported mental health measures, we incorporate occupation-level data on
working conditions from external sources.
Our analysis leverages pension reforms enacted between 2011 and 2015 in 14
European countries, integrating data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and
Retirement in Europe with job quality measures from the European Working
Conditions Survey. Using a staggered difference-in-differences design, we
estimate the causal impact of extended work horizons on depression while
accounting for cross-country differences in labor markets and pension
systems.
Our findings confirm that, on average, delaying retirement negatively
affects older workers' mental health. However, the magnitude of this impact
varies significantly depending on job quality. Workers in unsupportive
social environments, precarious jobs with limited career prospects, or
roles with low autonomy and high intensity exhibit the highest increases in
depression. In contrast, those in supportive workplaces, stable jobs, and
high-autonomy roles experience milder negative effects or even mental
health benefits. To ensure pension reforms do not adversely affect workers’
well-being, they should be complemented by labor market policies that
promote sustainable working conditions, job adaptability, and lifelong
learning.
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