Abstract
Background: After German reunification mortality among older East Germans converged quickly to the West German level. Simultaneously, they witnessed an 10-fold rise in pension benefits.

Objective: By using this natural experiment, we seek to show, first, that increasing financial transfers from the elderly to their children led to increasing reverse transfers in form of care and, second, that this rise in hours spent for care led to a reduction in old age mortality.

Method: We use poisson regression to test whether rising pensions led to an increase of hours spend on care and if this increase led to a reduction in old age mortality. We use data from the German Pension Fund and data on time use from the NTA project.

Preliminary Results: Our first results reveal that since German reunification intergenerational downward transfers more than doubled. This is caused by the immense increase in pension benefits since the Fall of the Berlin Wall. At the same time, mortality for pensioners dropped markedly and converged to the West German level.
confirm funding
Event ID
17
Paper presenter
53 383
Type of Submissions
Regular session presentation, if not selected I agree to present my paper as a poster
Language of Presentation
English
Weight in Programme
3
Status in Programme
1
Submitted by tobias.vogt on