Abstract

An important current policy goal in many Western countries is for individuals to extend their working lives. Ageism has been identified as a possible threat to achieving this; furthermore, the ways in which ageism may affect this policy goal may have been underestimated. It has been claimed previously that ageism can be seen as discrimination against one’s future self and that a lifetime of internalising age stereotypes makes older people themselves believe the age stereotypes. The current article uses the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing to assess the degree to which internalised ageism is related to one’s preferred retirement age. For internalised ageism, assessments are made about the degree to which individuals consider themselves to be old; they agree that their age prevents them from undertaking activities; they are pessimistic about their own future health and that being old comes with deteriorating health more generally. Results show that health pessimism especially affects one’s preferred retirement age negatively, even when controlling for current health and other factors, and mainly for middle-educated women. Implications are discussed.

Highlights

  • It has been claimed that workers need to extend their working lives, as increased population ageing will put pressure on the welfare state, lead to a larger dependency ratio, and therewith affect economic growth and productivity

  • The most consistent relationship appears to be between health pessimism and preferred retirement age

  • When individuals believe that their health will be worse when they get older, they have a lower preferred retirement age

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Summary

Introduction

It has been claimed that workers need to extend their working lives, as increased population ageing will put pressure on the welfare state, lead to a larger dependency ratio (number of people considered to be dependent on employment-aged individuals), and therewith (negatively) affect economic growth and productivity (cf. ILC-UK, 2017; Phillipson, 2018). Projections for the European Union have indicated that the percentage of people aged 65 and older will rise from 17% in 2010 to over 30% in 2060 (Walker & Maltby, 2012). Assumptions behind this have been challenged (see, e.g., Phillipson, 2018), extending workers’ working lives remains an important policy goal in many Western countries (see, e.g., Egdell, Maclean, Reaside, & Chen, 2018). There are several experimental studies suggesting that—at least for certain jobs—employers prefer younger workers (e.g., Ahmed, Andersson, & Hammarstedt, 2012; Riach & Rich, 2002)

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