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Abstract
Increasing older people's employment rates could reduce the economic pressures of an aging population, and many older adults say they want to delay retirement. Yet, numerous public policies and private practices continue to encourage early retirement. The Urban Institute, with support from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, sponsored an October 2007 roundtable to examine the value of older adults' work. Researchers, practitioners, employers, and policymakers discussed the potential supply of and demand for older workers, the benefits of working longer, barriers to continued employment, and policy solutions to encourage work at older ages. This document summarizes the issues and discussion.
Introduction
The first wave of baby boomers
reached retirement age this year, reminding us that
a future of labor shortages and a drain on Social
Security and Medicare finances is getting closer. The
rise in the share of retirees in the population, long
projected but now upon us, could strain the economy
for decades. In just nine years, Social Security
is scheduled to begin paying more in benefits than it
collects in taxes. If current employment patterns
continue, the number of workers for every retired
adult will fall from 3.2 to 2.2 between 2010 and
2030, meaning that each worker will have to pay
more to support retirees or retirement benefits will
have to be cut.
One way to ease the pressure is to encourage
adults to delay retirement and stay in the workforce.
Perhaps now more than ever, the decision every
adult makes to work or retire will have a profound
effect on public budgets and the economy. Keeping
older adults employed increases tax revenue and may
promote economic growth. Working longer also
increases people’s Social Security and employersponsored
pension benefits and delays their period of
dependency on retirement savings. Studies suggest
working longer may even improve physical and
emotional health.
Adults, who are living longer and healthier lives,
say they want to stay in the workplace as they age.
Jobs are becoming less physically demanding. Companies
are gravitating toward pension plans that don’t
penalize employees for working past typical retirement
ages, and employees are redefining retirement
to include part-time work and self-employment. In
response to these trends, employers are talking about
ways to accommodate older employees with flexible
work options.
In October 2007, the Urban Institute presented
a roundtable, sponsored by the Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation, to explore the economic value of older
adults’ work. Participants included leading researchers,
practitioners, and policymakers, as well as
employers and stakeholders from the private and
public sectors. The group discussed the potential supply
of and demand for older workers, the benefits of
working longer, barriers to continued employment,
and policy solutions to encourage work at older ages.
The roundtable began with discussions surrounding
labor supply and demand. Session moderators
described the characteristics of today’s older workers
and identified trends in work at older ages. Participants
agreed on the benefits of working longer
and the risks of retiring early and identified several
reasons adults may want to delay retirement. There
was less consensus on whether employers will want
to hire and accommodate older workers. While several
surveys document employer attitudes concerning
older workers, there has been less research on
what employers are actually doing to hire and retain
older workers. Participants had varied opinions
about future trends in demand for older workers. An
aging population may tighten labor markets, compelling
employers to increase hiring and retention of
older workers. Then again, technological advancements
and the outsourcing of American jobs to lowwage
foreign countries may reduce labor demand
and avert potential labor shortages. Until demographic
pressures begin to mount, future labor
demand will be uncertain.
In the second half of the discussion, participants
identified public policies that might discourage work
at older ages, including access to early Social Security
benefits, early-retirement incentives in traditional
pension plans, and the requirement that
employer-sponsored health plans pay workers’
insurance claims before Medicare kicks in. Other
work disincentives include pension regulations that
discourage employers from offering phased retirement
and age discrimination laws that may keep
employers from giving some of their older workers
benefits or flexible work options that others do not
receive. Participants also reviewed the costs and
benefits of different business practices that would
allow for flexible work options. The group concluded by creating a list of possible policy responses and research priorities.
(End of excerpt. The entire paper is available in PDF format.)
The nonpartisan Urban Institute publishes studies, reports, and books on timely topics worthy of public consideration. The views expressed are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the Urban Institute, its trustees, or its funders.
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