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Do spouses coordinate their work exits? A combined survey and register analysis From Norway

Syse, Astri; Solem, Per Erik; Ugreninov, Elisabeth; Mykletun, Reidar; Furunes, Trude
Journal article, Peer reviewed
This work is licensed under a creative commons attribution non commercial license. c c- b y- n c
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URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10642/2455
Date
2014
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  • SVA - Norwegian Social Research (NOVA) [616]
Original version
Syse,A., Solem, P.E., Ugreninov, E., Mykletun, R. & Furunes,T. (2014). Do spouses coordinate their work exits? A combined survey and register analysis from Norway. Research on Aging, 36(5), 625-650. doi:10.1177/0164027513516151   http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0164027513516151
Abstract
Research on spouses’ joint work exits is scarce, although household factors such as spouses’ work status, marital quality, and caregiving burdens are likely to affect seniors’ work engagement. We therefore examine whether the work exit probability of one spouse affects that of the other. Discretetime hazard regression analyses of survey data linked to later registry information including all gainfully employed married respondents aged 50–74 with a working spouse (N ¼ 1,764) were used to assess subsequent work exits. A spouse’s work exit is a strong predictor of a respondent’s work exit (hazard ratio 3.1, 95% confidence interval [2.5, 4.0]). Educational attainment, poor marital quality, and spouses’ health and care needs do not predict work exits. Surprisingly, no gender differences are observed. Research on larger survey samples to distinguish different work exit routes and reasons for spouses’
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Series
Research on Aging;36(5)

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