TY - JOUR T1 - Early Social Security Claiming and Old-Age Poverty: Evidence from the Introduction of the Social Security Early Eligibility Age JF - Journal of Human Resources JO - J Hum Resour DO - 10.3368/jhr.57.4.0119-9973R1 SP - 0119-9973R1 AU - Gary V. Engelhardt AU - Jonathan Gruber AU - Anil Kumar Y1 - 2020/07/08 UR - http://jhr.uwpress.org/content/early/2020/06/29/jhr.57.4.0119-9973R1.abstract N2 - We estimate the impact of the Social Security early entitlement age (EEA) on later-life income, poverty, and mortality, by tracing birth cohorts of men who had access to different potential claiming ages from the Social Security Amendments of 1961, which introduced age 62 as the EEA. Based on 1968-2001 Current Population Survey data, the average claiming age fell by 1.4 years, Social Security income fell for male-headed families by 2.4% at the mean and 6% at the 25th percentile. Total family income fell, and the poverty rate rose by about one percentage point. Finally, mortality rates fell modestly in retirement. ER -