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Posts by LSE Ageing & Health Incentive Lab (AHIL)

The Longevity Economy: Financing Healthy Ageing

The Longevity Economy: Financing Healthy Ageing

LSE Health's @lseahil.bsky.social & UPenn's PARC invite submissions to the 2026 Workshop on 'The Longevity Economy: Financing Healthy Ageing' 🌍 Topics: pensions, LTC, housing & behavioural econ.

Deadline: 1 May 2026. #LSEHealth

🔗 bit.ly/47oUnUs

1 month ago 6 4 0 0
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2026 Workshop on 'The Longevity Economy: Financing Healthy Ageing'

Call for papers!

2026 Online Workshop 'The Longevity Economy: Financing Healthy Ageing' w/ Keynote Speaker Jim Poterba
▶️ Monday 29 June 2026, 11am-6pm BST

Co-organised by AHIL @lseahil.bsky.social at LSE & PARC @pennaging.bsky.social

Submission Deadline: 1 May 2026
www.lse.ac.uk/lse-health/r...

1 month ago 2 2 0 0
The Longevity Economy: Financing Healthy Ageing

The Longevity Economy: Financing Healthy Ageing

🎤 LSE Health's @lseahil.bsky.social Longevity Economy Workshop welcomes keynote speaker Prof Jim Poterba (MIT & NBER President) — a world-leading economist on ageing & public finance. 29 June 2026.

Submit by 1 May. #LSEHealth

🔗 bit.ly/47oUnUs

1 month ago 2 2 0 0
Preview
2026 Workshop on 'The Longevity Economy: Financing Healthy Ageing'

Call for papers. 2026 Workshop on 'The Longevity Economy: Financing Healthy Ageing (deadline: 1st May) www.lse.ac.uk/lse-health/r...

1 month ago 3 2 0 0
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What is the secret of the “healthy stress” enjoyed by kings and queens? What is the “royal advantage” enjoyed by royals vs ordinary people in life expectancy? And what is “healthy stress” enjoyed by kings and queens specifically?

How much longer than the rest of us do royals live for? And do kings and queens enjoy a “healthy stress”?

@jcosta-font.bsky.social @lsehealthpolicy.bsky.social @lseahil.bsky.social for @lseinequalities.bsky.social

5 months ago 4 3 0 0
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What is the secret of the “healthy stress” enjoyed by kings and queens? What is the “royal advantage” enjoyed by royals vs ordinary people in life expectancy? And what is “healthy stress” enjoyed by kings and queens specifically?

What is the “royal advantage” enjoyed by royals vs ordinary people in life expectancy? And is there a surprising “healthy stress” enjoyed by kings and queens specifically?

Joan Costa-Font reports in our latest blog post #LSEInequalitiesBlog

🔗 buff.ly/a0o09fe

6 months ago 2 2 0 0
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Expanding state private insurance partnership programs can help reduce public spending on long term care write @jcosta-font.bsky.social and Nilesh Raut of @lseahil.bsky.social , @lsehealthpolicy.bsky.social

blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/20...

11 months ago 3 2 0 0
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Equal before luck? Well-being consequences of personal deprivation and transition Past trauma resulting from personal life shocks, especially during periods of particular volatility such as regime transition (or regime change), can …

"Personal shocks (e.g. hunger, persecution, dispossession, and exceptional stress) affect later life health, especially among individuals living in formerly communist countries" www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

1 year ago 2 0 0 0
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@lseahil.bsky.social and the GenevaAssociation announce a
special issue of the Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance on "Insurance and Health across the Life Course". We look forward to receiving your papers www.palgrave.com/gp/journal/4...

1 year ago 5 2 0 0
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The overlooked economic value of adult informal care Unpaid care provided by family members or friends remains the predominant form of support for older people in Europe. This column examines ways to measure the value of informal care and presents estimates using a wellbeing-based methodology. The findings suggest that the compensating surplus – the income equivalent required to offset the disutility experienced by informal caregivers – ranges from €5 per hour in Spain to €22 per hour in Switzerland, while the value as a percentage of GDP ranges from 0.85% in Germany to 4.2% in France. The relative value declines as the country's share of formal long-term care spending increases.

"The income equivalent required to offset the disutility experienced by informal caregivers – ranges from 0.85% in Germany to 4.2% in France, and declines as the country's share of formal long-term care spending increases" cepr.org/voxeu/column...

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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@lseahil.bsky.social and the GenevaAssociation announce a
special issue of the Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance on "Insurance and Health across the Life Course". We look forward to receiving your papers www.palgrave.com/gp/journal/4...

1 year ago 5 2 0 0