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		| Marco  Cozzi and Qiushan  Li | 
	
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		| ''Do wealth shocks matter for the life satisfaction of the elderly? Evidence from the health and retirement study'' | 
	
		| ( 2024, Vol. 44 No.1 ) | 
	
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		| We study the importance of wealth shocks as a determinant of life satisfaction for the elderly and near-elderly. With data from the U.S. Health and Retirement Study, we specify an econometric analysis exploiting the 2008-09 financial crisis as a source of exogenous variation in wealth, caused by a long-lasting decrease in asset prices. Although absolute changes in wealth are not found to systematically affect individual well-being, losing 60% or more of the pre-crisis wealth negatively impacted measures of life satisfaction. The results are shown to hold also in a number of robustness checks. The financial crisis wealth shock is found to have a persistent detrimental effect on the well-being of the American elderly. Finally, we argue that the simultaneity bias arising from neglecting the endogeneity of wealth accumulation can be substantial. | 
	
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		| Keywords: Wealth,  Uninsurable shocks,  Life Satisfaction,  Subjective Well-Being | 
	
		| JEL: I3 - Welfare and Poverty: General D1 - Household Behavior: General
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		| | Manuscript Received : Oct 29 2021 |  | Manuscript Accepted : Mar 30 2024 | 
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