Delays in Claiming Social Security Benefits
53 Pages Posted: 9 Mar 2000 Last revised: 1 Jan 2023
Date Written: August 1999
Abstract
This paper focuses on Social Security benefit claiming behavior, a take-up decision that has been ignored in the previous literature. Using financial calculations and simulations based on an expected utility maximization model, we show that delaying benefit claim for a period of time after retirement is optimal in a wide variety of cases and that gains from delay may be significant. We find that approximately 10% of men retiring before their 62nd birthday delay claiming for at least one year after eligibility. We estimate hazard and probit models using data from the New Beneficiary Data System to test four cross-sectional predictions. While the data suggest that too few men delay, we find that the pattern of delays by early retirees is generally consistent with the hypotheses generated by our theoretical model.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Social Security and Retirement
By Courtney Coile and Jonathan Gruber
-
Social Security and Retirement
By Courtney Coile and Jonathan Gruber
-
Social Security and Retirement in the U.S
By Peter A. Diamond and Jonathan Gruber
-
Social Security Programs and Retirement Around the World: Micro Estimation
By Jonathan Gruber and David A. Wise
-
Pensions, the Option Value of Work, and Retirement
By James H. Stock and David A. Wise
-
By Jonathan Gruber and David A. Wise
-
Social Security Programs and Retirement Around the World: Introduction and Summary of Papers by..
By Jonathan Gruber and David A. Wise
-
The Social Security Early Entitlement Age in a Structural Model of Retirement and Wealth
-
Pension and Social Security Wealth in the Health and Retirement Study
By Alan L. Gustman, Olivia S. Mitchell, ...