In 1998, the Social Security Administration established the Retirement Research Consortium to encourage research on topics related to Social Security and the well-being of older Americans, and to foster communication between the academic and policy communities. The Michigan Retirement Research Center (MRRC) participated in the Consortium from its inception until 2019, when the MRRC expanded and became the Michigan Retirement and Disability Research Center. This article surveys a selection of the MRRC’s output over its second 10 years (2008–2017), summarizes its innovative use of new data sources, and highlights several key themes in the center’s research contributions
Summarizes experts' discussions of key technical issues in estimating how the effects of proposed So...
Using data from the Canadian Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics (1993 through 2001), the first ess...
Among industrialized nations, the United States has a unique system for providing social welfare, as...
In 1998, the Social Security Administration established the Retirement Research Consortium to encour...
The charge of the Technical Panel on Trends and Issues in Retirement Savings (TIRS) was to assist t...
The past 30 years have been a period of fundamental change in public policies that relate to disabil...
This paper evaluates potential responses to reductions in early Social Security retirement benefits....
The research reported herein was performed pursuant to a grant from the U.S. Social Security Adminis...
This paper highlights unanswered research questions in the economics of retirement, and shows how th...
[Excerpt] This volume enables researchers to learn about some of the latest research findings on spe...
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) was established in 1974 by the Employee Retirement I...
College’s Carroll School of Management and the director of the CRR. Matthew S. Rutledge is a researc...
This honors thesis is an analysis of the Old Age and Survivors Insurance portion of Social Security ...
One in five Americans has a disability, making it the largest minority group in the U.S. (Soffer, Mc...
The Social Security Amendments of 1983 reduced the generosity of Social Security retired worker bene...
Summarizes experts' discussions of key technical issues in estimating how the effects of proposed So...
Using data from the Canadian Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics (1993 through 2001), the first ess...
Among industrialized nations, the United States has a unique system for providing social welfare, as...
In 1998, the Social Security Administration established the Retirement Research Consortium to encour...
The charge of the Technical Panel on Trends and Issues in Retirement Savings (TIRS) was to assist t...
The past 30 years have been a period of fundamental change in public policies that relate to disabil...
This paper evaluates potential responses to reductions in early Social Security retirement benefits....
The research reported herein was performed pursuant to a grant from the U.S. Social Security Adminis...
This paper highlights unanswered research questions in the economics of retirement, and shows how th...
[Excerpt] This volume enables researchers to learn about some of the latest research findings on spe...
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) was established in 1974 by the Employee Retirement I...
College’s Carroll School of Management and the director of the CRR. Matthew S. Rutledge is a researc...
This honors thesis is an analysis of the Old Age and Survivors Insurance portion of Social Security ...
One in five Americans has a disability, making it the largest minority group in the U.S. (Soffer, Mc...
The Social Security Amendments of 1983 reduced the generosity of Social Security retired worker bene...
Summarizes experts' discussions of key technical issues in estimating how the effects of proposed So...
Using data from the Canadian Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics (1993 through 2001), the first ess...
Among industrialized nations, the United States has a unique system for providing social welfare, as...