Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T16:50:33.320Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

How do baby boomers' mobility patterns change with retirement?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 February 2015

ANU SIREN*
Affiliation:
The Danish National Centre for Social Research, Copenhagen, Denmark.
SONJA HAUSTEIN
Affiliation:
Department of Transport, Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark.
*
Address for correspondence: Anu Siren, The Danish National Centre for Social Research, Herluf Trolles Gade 11, DK-1052 Copenhagen, Denmark E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Baby boomers will comprise a considerable share of tomorrow's older population. Previous research has indicated higher travel activity and car use amongst baby boomers than amongst older cohorts. However, little evidence exists on the effects of boomers' ageing on the transportation system. To analyse how retirement affects baby boomers' travel and the related future travel demand, we compared three groups, distinguished by employment status as ‘still working’, ‘early retirees’ and ‘recent retirees’, in a longitudinal setting. Data for 864 individuals were collected via standardised telephone interviews in 2009 and 2012. We find a clear tendency towards reducing the car use and mileage over time and as a consequence of retirement. Nevertheless, car use for leisure purposes increased after retirement. Whilst retirement had a bigger impact on men's than on women's car use, those women who continued working had a high car reliance that did not decline over time. This study suggests that retirement is a transition point associated with decreasing car use. Hence, the ageing of the population is likely to have a decreasing effect on transportation demand. However, informal care-giving, prolonged careers and atypical working life, boomer women's changing professional roles, and the emergence of leisure and consumption as major cultural and social frameworks of the third age are likely to make this transition different than observed in previous cohorts.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Arentze, T., Timmermanns, H., Jorritsma, P., Kalter, M.-J. O. and Schoemakers, A. 2008. More grey hair – but for whom? Scenario-based simulations of elderly activity travel patterns in 2020. Transportation, 35, 5, 613–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Choi, M., Adams, K. B. and Kahana, E. 2013. Self-regulatory driving behaviors: gender and transportation support effects. Journal of Women & Aging, 25, 2, 104–18.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Collia, D. V., Sharp, J. and Giesbrecht, L. 2003. The 2001 national household travel survey: a look into the travel patterns of older Americans. Journal of Safety Research, 34, 4, 461–70.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Coughlin, J. F. 2009. Longevity, lifestyle, and anticipating the new demands of aging on the transportation system. Public Works Management & Policy, 13, 4, 301–11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edmunds, J. and Turner, B. S. 2002. Generations, Culture and Society. Open University Press, Buckingham, UK.Google Scholar
Fingerman, K. L., Pillemer, K. L., Silverstein, M. and Suitor, J. J. 2012. The baby boomers’ intergenerational relationships. Gerontologist, 52, 2, 199209.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gilleard, C. and Higgs, P. 2007. The third age and the baby boomers. Two approaches to the social structuring of later life. International Journal of Ageing and Later Life, 2, 2, 1330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Götz, K. and Ohnmacht, T. 2012. Research on mobility and lifestyle – what are the results? In Grieco, M. and Urry, J. (eds), Mobilities: New Perspectives on Transport and Society. Ashgate, Farnham, UK, 91108.Google Scholar
Goulias, K. G., Blain, L., Kilgren, N., Michalowski, T. and Murakami, E. 2007. Catching the next big wave: do observed behavioral dynamics of baby boomers force rethinking of regional travel demand models? Transportation Research Record, 2014, 6775.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hjorthol, R. J., Levin, L. and Siren, A. 2010. Mobility in different generations of older persons: the development of daily travel in different cohorts in Denmark, Norway and Sweden. Journal of Transport Geography, 18, 5, 624–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
INFAS and DLR 2010. Mobilität in Deutschland 2008 [Mobility in Germany 2008]. Ergebnisbericht im Auftrag des Bundesministeriums für Verkehr, Bau und Stadtentwicklung. Available online at http://mobilitaet-in-deutschland.de/02_MiD2008/publikationen.htm [Accessed December 1, 2014].Google Scholar
Karisto, A. 2007. Finnish baby boomers and the emergence of the third age. International Journal of Ageing and Later Life, 2, 2, 91108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kostyniuk, L. P. and Shope, J. T. 2003. Driving and alternatives: older drivers in Michigan. Journal of Safety Research, 34, 4, 407–14.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lanzendorf, M. 2002. Mobility styles and travel behavior – application of a lifestyle approach to leisure travel. Transportation Research Record, 1807, 163–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGuckin, N. and Lynott, J. 2012. Impact of Baby Boomers on U.S. Travel, 1969 to 2009. Insight on the Issues Number 70, AARP Public Policy Institute, Washington DC.Google Scholar
Metz, D. 2012. Demographic determinants of daily travel demand. Transport Policy, 21, 20–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miranda-Moreno, L. F. and Lee-Gosselin, M. 2008. A week in the life of baby boomers: how do they see the spatial-temporal organization of their activities and travel? Transportation, 35, 5, 629–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moschis, G. P. and McArthur, A. 2007. Baby Boomers and Their Parents. Paramount Market Publishing, Ithaca, New York.Google Scholar
Newbold, K. B., Scott, D. M., Spinney, J. E. L., Kanaroglou, P. and Páez, A. 2005. Travel behaviour within Canada's older population: a cohort analysis. Journal of Transport Geography, 13, 4, 340–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ottman, P. 2010. Abbildung demographischer Prozesse in Verkehrsentstehungsmodellen mit Hilfe von Längsschnittdaten [Integration of Demographic Processes into Trip Generation Modelling Based on Longitudinal Data]. KIT Scientific Publishing, Karlsruhe, Germany.Google Scholar
Páez, A., Scott, D., Potoglou, D., Kanaroglou, P. and Newbold, K. B. 2007. Elderly mobility: demographic and spatial analysis of trip making in the Hamilton CMA, Canada. Urban Studies, 44, 1, 123–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price, C. A. 2002. Retirement for women: the impact of employment. Journal of Women & Aging, 14, 3/4, 4157.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rees, C. and Lyth, A. 2004. Exploring the future of car use for an ageing society: preliminary results from a Sydney study. Paper presented at the 27th Australasian Transport Research Forum, 29 September–1 October, Adelaide, Australia.Google Scholar
Rosenbloom, S. 2006. Is the driving experience of older women changing? Safety and mobility consequences over time. Transportation Research Record, 1956, 127–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenbloom, S. 2011. Driving off into the sunset: The implications of the growing automobility of older travelers. In Lucas, K., Blumenberg, E. and Weinberger, R. (eds), Auto Motives. Understanding Car Use. Emerald Group Pub. Ltd., Bingley, UK, 173192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenbloom, S. and Fielding, G. J. 1998. Transit Markets of the Future – The Challenge of Change. National Academy Press, Washington DC.Google Scholar
Samus, J. N. 2013. Preparing for the next generation of senior population: an analysis of changes in senior travel behavior over the last two decades . Graduate School Theses and Dissertations. Available online at http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/4574 [Accessed December 1, 2014].Google Scholar
Scheiner, J. 2010. Social inequalities in travel behaviour: trip distances in the context of residential self-selection and lifestyles. Journal of Transport Geography, 18, 6, 679–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Siren, A. 2005. Older women's mobility and transportation issues: restraints and regulations, lust and splendour . PhD thesis, University of Helsinki, Helsinki.Google Scholar
Siren, A., Hakamies-Blomqvist, L. and Lindeman, M. 2004. Driving cessation and health in older women. Journal of Applied Gerontology, 23, 1, 5869.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Siren, A. and Haustein, S. 2013. Baby boomers mobility patterns and preferences. What are the implications for future transport? Transport Policy, 29, 136–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Statistics Denmark 2013. StatBank Denmark. Available online at http://www.dst.dk/en/Statistik/statistikbanken.aspx [Accessed December 1, 2014].Google Scholar