Aging in America: An Examination of Financial and Health Decision Making among Older Adults

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Degree type

Discipline

Economics

Subject

Aging
Cognition
Financial Decision Making
Financial and Health Literacy
Fraud

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Copyright date

2024

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Author

Yu, Lei
Boyle, Patricia

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Abstract

The US population is aging, and aging is associated with cognitive, contextual, psychosocial, and other changes that can impact people’s ability to make effective decisions. Ineffective decision making, particularly related to finances and healthcare, can have significant and irreversible effects on wellbeing. Better understanding the relationships between aging and decision making is needed to identify ways to maintain or even enhance decision making ability as we grow older. This chapter reviews research that examines how aging impacts decision making and susceptibility to financial fraud, including the role that financial literacy plays, and discusses how findings from this research inform policies aimed at protecting older adults from the problems that can arise from suboptimal decisions.

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WP2024-19

Publication date

2024-10-03

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All findings, interpretations, and conclusions of this paper represent the views of the authors and does not represent official views of the above-named institutions. © 2024 Pension Research Council of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. All rights reserved.

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