Poverty is very widespread in the United States, especially among the over 75s
Inequality in the United States is higher and has been increasing faster between generations than in the OECD
Inequality in the United States is high among the population 65 and over
In the United States wealth is distributed more unevenly across age groups than in most other countries
Pension replacement rates are low in the United States
If voluntary pensions were more widespread old-age income would be less of a problem
Labour market exit ages are unevenly distributed in most countries
High-educated people tend to leave the labour market later
Many low-educated people enter retirement from inactivity or unemployment
Older workers are not equally represented across sectors
Many workers retire at age 62 in the United States
Health is an important retirement driver among men
Healthy women have a higher chance of remaining employed
Many older people with care responsibilities do not work
The relationship between caregiving and working differs across educational groups
Defined benefit pension plans provide less incentive to retire early than in the past
Combining pensions and work is uncommon in many OECD countries
In the United States working hours decline only slightly with age
High-educated people reduce their working hours more with age than the low-educated in most countries