What the numbers really tell us about living longer in
retirement
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[October 25, 2018]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Covering the retirement
beat, I often hear this claim: “We’re all living longer.”
It usually precedes arguments for various strategies to help build
retirement security in an age of boundless longevity - such as
persuading people to save more money or delay filing for Social
Security. It also is used to argue that pension, Social Security or
Medicare benefits are unaffordable, and should be cut.
Average longevity has indeed risen in the United States but the gains
are tapering off, according to the Society of Actuaries (SOA), which
this week released its annual “mortality improvement scale,” which
pension plan sponsors use to project their future payout obligations.
It reflects a slight decline in life expectancy compared with 2017 due
to growth in three of the 10 leading causes of death in the United
States: unintentional injury, Alzheimer’s disease and suicide. All three
categories increased significantly from 2015 to 2016, he notes. The new
life expectancy for a 65-year-old man fell just over a month, to 85.6
years; for women, the average number fell just under a month, to 87.6
years.
The most significant declines have occurred in middle-aged people, aged
25 to 56, notes Hall. And more broadly, he says the U.S. mortality
numbers have been deteriorating since 2010. “The trend toward improving
mortality has been much lower in recent years than it was historically,”
says Dale Hall, managing director of research for the SOA.
The question is, why?
The United States is one of the wealthiest countries in the world, and
we spend more on healthcare per capita than any other country. But life
expectancy and gains in health have lagged other high-income countries
for years, according to a 2013 report sponsored by the National
Institutes of Health and which included a panel of medical experts.
The study notes that the United States does have lower-than-average
cancer death rates and better control of blood pressure and cholesterol
than peer countries. As a result, if you reach age 75 you can expect to
live longer than your counterparts abroad.
LOSING AN OLYMPIC EVENT
But overall, the study found that Americans are faring worse in a wide
range of measures, including infant mortality and low birth weight,
injuries and homicides, drug-related deaths, obesity and diabetes, heart
disease and chronic lung disease. Many of the conditions sharply reduce
the odds of reaching age 50 - and for those who do, the conditions
contribute to poorer health and greater illness later in life, the
report found.
“If health were an Olympic event, we have been getting beat by lots of
other nations,” said Stephen Bezruchka, a professor at the School of
Public Health of the University of Washington in Seattle.
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Elderly women walk on a sidewalk in the Pius quarter in Ingolstadt,
Germany, October 5, 2018. Picture taken October 5, 2018.
REUTERS/Andreas Gebert
The poor performance does not stem only from problems with access to healthcare,
he notes. “We tend to confuse health and healthcare,” he said, adding that
research shows that medical care accounts for no more than 15 percent of the
mortality gap between the United States and other rich countries.
Epidemiologists have documented that societies with less economic equality have
worse than average health. Some of this stems from the inability of lower-income
households to meet basic needs such as adequate nutrition and shelter. But at
the high end of wealth, Bezruchka notes, there is a diminishing-return effect -
money can purchase only so much health.
“Those with more income do have lower mortality, but you get a greater return on
average health by taking a little from the rich and giving it to the poorer
person.”
The high rate of childhood poverty in the United States is another important
factor driving life expectancy, he said. “Healthier societies privilege early
life in various ways. For example, they give mothers or fathers paid time off to
raise kids - the U.S. is one of the only major countries in the world that don’t
have a nationally mandated paid parental leave.”
A study released earlier this year by the actuaries at the Social Security
Administration based on the agency’s massive database on American workers
confirmed that lifetime earnings have a profound effect on longevity.
[nL1N1S90YW] (https://reut.rs/2R80bZe).
The differences were expressed as mortality ratios. A ratio of 1.00 means death
rates for a given group were equal to the group as a whole; ratios lower than
that number indicate lower mortality, while a higher number indicates earlier
death.
In 2015 retired men aged 62-64 in the highest-income quintile had a ratio of
0.52, while those in the lowest-income quintile had a ratio of 1.77. The
comparable figures for women were not much different - 0.73 for the
highest-income quintile, and 1.54 for the lowest.
Proposals to raise the age of eligibility for Social Security or Medicare would
be a cruel blow to workers on the wrong side of those numbers. If we are going
to achieve more appropriate long-term reforms to these programs it will be
important to convince the public that "No - we are not all living longer."
Instead, we should be focusing on this question: why are Americans in poorer
health than people in comparable wealthy nations around the world - and what can
we do to change that?
(Reporting and writing by Mark Miller in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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