By browsing this website, you acknowledge the use of a simple identification cookie. It is not used for anything other than keeping track of your session from page to page. OK
1

Pension enhancements and the retention of public employees

Bookmarks
Article

Koedel, Cory ; Xiang, Brett

ILR Review

2017

70

2

March

519-551

education ; employment policy ; labour market ; labour supply ; retirement ; wages ; employee retention

USA

Labour market

http://ilr.sagepub.com/

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0019793916650452

English

Bibliogr.

"The authors use data from workers in the largest public-sector occupation in the United States—teaching—to examine the effect of pension enhancements on employee retention. Specifically, they study a 1999 enhancement to the benefit formula for public school teachers in St. Louis, Missouri, that resulted in an immediate and dramatic increase in their incentives to remain in covered employment. To identify the effect of the enhancement on teacher retention, the analysis leverages the fact that the strength of the incentive increase varied across the workforce depending on how far teachers were from retirement eligibility when it was enacted. The results indicate that the St. Louis enhancement—which was structurally similar to enhancements that were enacted in other public pension plans across the United States in the late 1990s and early 2000s—was not a cost-effective way to increase employee retention."

Digital



Bookmarks