The Poverty of Impoverishment Theory: The Economic Well-Being of the Elderly, 1890–1950
- 3 March 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Economic History
- Vol. 56 (1) , 39-61
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700016016
Abstract
Progressive Ear and New Deal reformers claimed that industrialization impoverished the elderly by degrading older workers. This has become the standard interpretation in popular and scholarly accounts. Data from 1890 through 1950 show that real wages of older workers rose sharply during this peroid and that family economic strategies promised the elderly considerable security. Birth cohort analysis indicates positive age-earnings profiles across the life cycle. Although the elderly benefited from economic growth, security in old age often demanded intrafamilial exchanges. Tensions arising from these transfers may explain the broad popular support Social Security received.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Unemployment and Retirement of Older Men: Further Evidence from the 1900 and 1910 CensusesHistorical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History, 1994
- FAMILIA OECONOMICA A SURVEY OF THE ECONOMICS OF THE FAMILYScottish Journal of Political Economy, 1993
- Industrialization, the Family Economy, and the Economic Status of the American ElderlySocial Science History, 1991
- "Homes Are What Any Strike Is About": Immigrant Labor and the Family WageJournal of Social History, 1989
- PARENTAL ALTRUISM AND SELF‐INTEREST: CHILD LABOR AMONG LATE NINETEENTH‐CENTURY AMERICAN FAMILIESEconomic Inquiry, 1989
- The Economic Status of the ElderlyScience, 1989
- The New Welfare State: Social Security and Retirement in 1950Social Science History, 1988
- The Aged as ScapegoatThe Gerontologist, 1983
- Aging and Cohort Succession: Interpretations and MisinterpretationsPublic Opinion Quarterly, 1973
- American Standards and Planes of LivingThe American Journal of Nursing, 1931