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Baby Boomers
The
Best Years of Their Lives
Retirement
is increasingly regarded as a transition to another work life--a work
life that is more in tune with who you are and what you enjoy doing.
Before retirement is the time to dream about what you would love doing
and invest in that dream by being specific as to what, where and how
to make your
dream a reality.
In
2000, 37% of men and 31% of women age 55 to 64 were employed full or
part-time while receiving pension income, according to investment firm
TAA-CREF. Those proportions are likely to go higher with 8 out of 10
baby boomer saying they plan to work in retirement according to an AARP
study.
A
2003 survey by the Society for Human Resource Management found almost
seven in ten (68 percent) organizations say they employ older workers
who have retired.
A
survey by Allstate Financial of Northbrook, IL of 1,004 Baby Boomers,
born between 1946 and 1961, found 82 percent believe that retirement
will be more fun and rewarding than their parent's retirement. Others
believe it will be more active (65%) and the best years of their lives
(63%).
The
population bubble caused by the baby boom keeps floating up: Proportionately,
there are more people over the age of 50 than ever before. Most Baby
Boomers (the cohort of Americans born between 1946 and 1964) believe
that they will still be working during their retirement years. Eight
in ten say they plan to work at least part-time--and others envision
starting their own business or working full-time at a new job or career--according
to an AARP Segmentation Analysis: Baby Boomers Envision Their Retirement.
This
"phased
retirement" of Baby Boomers will shape the American workplace
and compensate for a severe talent gap due to a shrinking supply of
new workforce entrants. Phased retirement will allow Baby Boomers to
devote more free time to community service/volunteer activities and
their grandparent role by living near at least one of their children.
A
greater percentage of those over 55 are working today than a year ago.
In part, because older workers are prized for their corporate experience,
personal relationships and stability. "It's not at all surprising
that we're seeing people who have come from the Old Economy set
of values becoming more attractive again now," says Barry Honig,
president of New Jersey-based executive search firm Honig International.
According
to a survey by ExecuNet, an executive career services firm, 61% of senior
managers believe age discrimination is a bigger problem than it was
just one year ago---and a whopping 84% say it starts around age 50.
If you are a Baby Boomer, looking forward to a phased
retirement, suggest you check out these
job seeking tips.