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Simon Rottke, Alexander Klos, Savings and Consumption When Children Move Out, Review of Finance, Volume 20, Issue 6, October 2016, Pages 2349–2377, https://doi.org/10.1093/rof/rfv064
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We show, using data from the Italian Survey on Household Income and Wealth and the German Socio-economic Panel, that household consumption drops after a child moves out of a household, while at the same time adult-equivalent consumption increases significantly. After all children are gone, parents upgrade their personal lifestyle to a level approximately that of childless peers, and save only a small proportion of the freed-up resources. Since parents had fewer resources to save while they were young, retirement preparedness among them is a more serious concern than among childless individuals.