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要 旨
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This paper examines how spousal retirement affects psychological well-being
in Chinese households using 2016–2020 China Family Panel Survey data. Exploiting statutory retirement ages as instruments in a two-stage least squares framework, we identify causal effects of retirement transitions. Results show clear gender asymmetries in these spillover effects. For men, a wife’s retirement increases
life satisfaction regardless of the husband’s labor-force status, with further gains
in depression and marital satisfaction once both partners retire. For women, a
husband’s retirement raises depressive symptoms while the wife remains employed, but this effect disappears after her own retirement, when life satisfaction significantly improves. Mechanism analyses suggest these effects operate
through gender-differentiated adjustments in household labor allocation and joint
consumption patterns. These findings underscore that retirement in China is a
collective family-level transition rather than an individual event, highlighting the
role of institutional constraints and gender norms in shaping the welfare of aging
couples.(JEL分類:J26; D13; I31; J14; J12)
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