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A lack of financial planning predicts increased mortality risk: Evidence from cohort studies in the United Kingdom and United States.

Joe J GladstoneC Sean Hundtofte
Published in: PloS one (2023)
We investigate whether a lack of planning and future-orientation in financial behavior is associated with a higher mortality risk. Our evidence is based on two nationally representative cohorts of older people living in the United States (n = 11,478) and England (n = 11,298), where we compared individuals' self-reported planning horizons on spending and saving with government mortality records. Controlling for demographics, participants with a 1 SD shorter planning horizon had a 9% greater hazard of dying in the English sample (evaluated over 10 years), and a 7% greater hazard in the US sample (over 22 years). These differences in mortality risk could not be explained by variation in respondent's life expectancy, their financial circumstances or a range of other observable covariates. Similar results are found for self-reported health, with the positive association between longer planning horizons and health strongest for those with fewest financial resources.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • mental health
  • health information
  • childhood cancer
  • type diabetes
  • risk factors
  • young adults
  • cardiovascular disease
  • cross sectional
  • risk assessment