Endnotes

Chapter 4

a. Society of Actuaries 2015 Risks and Process of Retirement Survey: Report of Findings. A US survey conducted on behalf of the society by Mathew Greenwald & Associates, Inc.

b. Stephen P. Bonnar, “Consumption Patterns of the Elderly” (master’s thesis, McMaster University, 2016), 82.

Chapter 5

a. Geoffrey N. Calvert, Pensions and Survival: The Coming Crisis of Money and Retirement (Toronto: Maclean-Hunter, 1977).

b. Benjamin Tal, “The Looming Bequest Boom — What Should We Expect?” In Focus newsletter. CIBC. June 2016.

c. Axel Börsch-Supan, “Savings and Consumption Patterns of the Elderly — The German Case,” Journal of Population Economics 5 (1992).

d. Malcolm Hamilton, “The Financial Circumstances of Elderly Canadians and the Implications for the Design of Canada’s Retirement Income System,” in The State of Economics in Canada (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2001).

e. David Domeij and Magnus Johannesson, “Consumption and Health,” The B.E. Journal of Macroeconomics 6, no. 1 (2006).

f. Cesira Urzi Brancati, Brian Beach, Ben Franklin, and Matthew Jones, Understanding Retirement Journeys — Expectations vs Reality. International Longevity Centre UK. November 2015.

g. McKinsey & Company, Building on Canada’s Strong Retirement Readiness. February 2015.

h. Catherine Michaud, “Development of a Consumer Price Index for Seniors,” Statistics Canada. June 2019.

Chapter 6

a. Society of Actuaries 2015 Risks and Process of Retirement Survey: Report of Findings, 125.

Chapter 10

b. Robert D. Arnott, Jason Hsu, and Vitali Kalesnik, “The Surprising Alpha from Malkiel’s Monkey and Upside-Down Strategies,” Practical Applications 1, no. 2 (2013).

Chapter 26

a. Steve Vernon, The Next Evolution in Defined Contribution Retirement Plan Design. Leland Stanford Junior University. September 2013.

b. Association of Canadian Pension Management. Decumulation, The Next Critical Frontier: Improvements for Defined Contribution and Capital Accumulation Plans. March 2017.