%0 Journal Article %J Journal of Labor Research %D 2020 %T Work-Life Balance and Labor Force Attachment at Older Ages %A Marco Angrisani %A Maria Casanova %A Erik Meijer %K Gender difference %K health shock %K Job characteristic %K Retirement %X We use data from the Health and Retirement Study to examine the role of work-life balance as a non-monetary determinant of retirement transitions, conditional on job attributes such as hours of work, compensation, and benefits. We rely on self-reported measures of work-life conflict to proxy for low levels of work-life balance. We show that high levels of work-life conflict are significantly associated with subsequent reductions in labor supply for workers aged 51 to 79, and document heterogeneity by gender and employment status. Moreover, work-life conflict moderates labor supply responses to spousal health shocks. Workers who report higher levels of work-life conflict are significantly more likely to reduce their labor supply in the two years following a spouse's health shock, and this effect is once more heterogeneous. The moderating effect of work-life conflict is stronger for women than men and, among female workers, stronger for those employed part-time at baseline. %B Journal of Labor Research %V 41 %P 34-68 %G eng %N 1-2 %R 10.1007/s12122-020-09301-8