TY - JOUR TI - Health&WealthMOD2030: A microsimulation model of the long term economic impacts of disease leading to premature retirements of Australians aged 45–64 years old AU - Schofield, Deborah AU - Shrestha, Rupendra AU - Kelly, Simon AU - Veerman, Lennert AU - Tanton, Robert AU - Passey, Megan AU - Vos, Theo AU - Cunich, Michelle AU - Callander, Emily VL - 7 IS - 2 PY - 2014 DA - 2014/08/31 SP - 94-118 C1 - IJM 2014;7(2):94-118 DO - 10.34196/ijm.00101 UR - https://doi.org/10.34196/ijm.00101 AB - Policymakers in Australia, like in most OECD countries, have recognised the importance of early retirement due to ill health on individuals and families, as well as on the budget balance when planning for the health needs of an ageing population. In order to understand these effects, a unique microsimulation model, called Health&WealthMOD2030, was built to estimate the impacts of early retirement due to ill health on labour force participation, personal and household income, economic hardship (poverty), and government taxation revenue, spending and GDP in the years 2010, 2015, 2020, 2025 and 2030. This paper describes the construction of Health&WealthMOD2030. The model captures the long term projections of demographic change, changing labour force participation patterns, real wages growth and trends in major illnesses affecting the older working age population. The base population of Health&WealthMOD2030 are the individuals aged 45–64 years with information on their work force status and health from the Australian Bureau of Statistics’ Surveys of Disability, Ageing and Carers (SDAC) 2003 and 2009. Projected estimates of income, taxation, income support payments, savings and superannuation from the National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling (NATSEM’s) dynamic microsimulation model Australian Population and Policy Simulation Model (APPSIM) were synthetically matched with the base population. Health&WealthMOD2030 project forward the economic impacts of early retirement from ill health to 2030. This will fill substantial gaps in the current Australian evidence of health conditions that will keep older working age Australians out of the labour market over the longterm. KW - chronic conditions KW - early retirement KW - economic impacts KW - ageing KW - synthetic matching KW - I15 KW - J21 KW - J26 JF - IJM SN - 1747-5864 PB - International Journal of Microsimulation ER -