Should We Reconsider What “Retirement” Means?
The notion that we separate from work in our sixties may
have to go.
Provided by WenJing He
An
executive transitions into a consulting role at age 62 and stops working
altogether at 65; then, he becomes a buyer for a church network at 69. A
corporate IT professional decides to conclude her career at age 58; she serves
as a city council member in her sixties, then opens an art studio at 70.
Are these
people retired? Not by the old definition of the word. Our definition of
“retirement” is changing. Retirement is now a time of activity and opportunity.
Generations ago, Americans never
retired – at least not voluntarily. American
life was either agrarian or industrialized, and people toiled until they died
or physically broke down. Their “social security” was their children. Society
had a low opinion of able-bodied adults who preferred leisure to work.
German
Chancellor Otto von Bismarck often gets credit for “inventing” the idea of
retirement. In the late 1800s, the German government set up the first pension
plan for those 65 and older. (Life expectancy was around 45 at the time.) When
our Social Security program began in 1935, it defined 65 as the U.S. retirement
age; back then, the average American lived about 62 years. Social Security was perceived
as a reward given to seniors during the final years of their lives, a financial
compliment for their hard work.1
After
World War II, the concept of retirement changed. The
model American worker was now the “organization man” destined to spend decades
at one large company, taken care of by his (or her) employer in a way many
people would welcome today. Americans began to associate retirement with
pleasure and leisure.
By
the 1970s, the definition of retirement had become rigid. You
retired in your early sixties, because your best years were behind you and it
was time to go. You died at about 72 or 75 (depending on your gender). In
between, you relaxed. You lived comfortably on an employee pension and Social
Security checks, and the risk of outliving your money was low. If you lived to
81 or 82, that was a good run. Turning 90 was remarkable.
Today, baby boomers cannot settle for these kinds of
retirement assumptions. This is partly due to economic uncertainty and partly
due to ambition. Retirement planning today is all about self-reliance, and to
die at 65 today is to die young with the potential of one’s “second act”
unfulfilled.
One
factor has altered our view of retirement more than any other. That
factor is the increase in longevity. When Social Security started, retirement
was seen as the quiet final years of life; by the 1960s, it was seen as an extended
vacation lasting 10-15 years; and now, it is seen as a decades-long window of
opportunity.
Working
past 70 may soon become common. Some baby boomers will need to do it,
but others will simply want to do it. Whether by choice or chance, some will
retire briefly and work again; others will rotate between periods of leisure
and work for as long as they can. Working full time or part time not only
generates income, it also helps to preserve invested retirement assets, giving
them more years to potentially compound. Another year on the job also means one
less year of retirement to fund.
Perhaps we should see retirement foremost as a time of
change – a time of changing what we want to do with our lives. According to the
actuaries at the Social Security Administration, the average 65-year-old has
about 20 years to pursue his or her interests. Planning for change may be the
most responsive move we can make for the future.2
WenJing
He may be reached at 800-916-9860 or hew@wenadvisory.com.
www.wenadvisory.com
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Citations.
1 - dailynews.com/2017/03/24/successful-aging-im-65-and-ok-with-it/
[3/24/17]
2 - ssa.gov/planners/lifeexpectancy.html [11/21/17]
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