3 Ways the Economic Crisis Is Destroying Baby Boomer Retirement

Here's how to cope with stock market declines, falling home prices, and the credit crunch

October 14, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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Job loss typically comes unexpectedly, and if you do manage to find a new job, it's likely to pay less than your old one. Highly educated workers will fare slightly better. "Going forward, the economy will add some jobs for college graduates with technical specialties in finance, healthcare, education, and engineering," predicts Peter Morici, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Business and former chief economist at the U.S. International Trade Commission. "However, for high school graduates without specialized technical skills or training and for college graduates with only liberal arts diplomas, jobs offering good pay and benefits remain tough to find. For those workers, who compose about half the working population, the quality of jobs continues to spiral downward." So, there's no better time to go back to school and make sure your skills are up to date.

Many baby boomers would like to scale back to part time, start a new business, or take an extended break from the workforce instead of retiring completely. But opportunities to try these creative forms of retirement could become scarcer. In 2006, 37 percent of employed men and 22 percent of employed women ages 65 to 69 worked for themselves, but the credit crunch could make it difficult for people to start and sustain small businesses.

It may be a good time to hold on to the job you have now. "Lots of people in their 50s and 60s experiment with retirement, find out they don't like it or can't afford it, and then go back to work," says Johnson. "If they try that these days, many won't be able to find new jobs." As more older Americans need to work full time to pay for living expenses, part-time and flexible work arrangements may also be harder to find. "People need to think carefully before they retire from their full-time jobs," says Johnson. "Because the part-time retirement jobs may be drying up."

Tags:
housing,
economy,
baby boomers,
stock market,
retirement

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Baby boomers:

Years have passed since this article came out.

The news hasn't gotten better. Many of us are in some trouble because of it. I know I am!

Let's gather together to talk. I can offer my Facebook page or my blog. Search for "Almost 60? Really??" On the off chance they allow links here, it's http://facebook.com/almost60really or http://almost60really.com If I've broken a rule, could you please just remove the URLs?

Or leave some way to find an existing conversation you may be in. I'd love to talk with others in the same boat.

Paula Lee Bright of MO 1:04AM August 29, 2011

This morning I saw a post in a Greenbay newspaper titled "Reinventing Baby Boomers". I think that is exactly what we face as baby boomers face retirement. We are reinventing retirement, reinventing baby boomer entrepreneurship, and reinventing America.

This economic crisis is making many things go away, but it is opening to us new doors of opportunity. Surely, with us baby boomers representing approximately a third of citizens, with baby boomers representing one half of all the self employed people in America, with baby boomers being the depository of knowledge and experience in the corporate world, who else but baby boomers can do the reinventing?

I personally think that when the dust settles, baby boomers will be among the big winners. Let's just slip into semi-retirement and in the process reinvent America.

Shallie Bey

Smarter Small Business Blog

Shallie Bey of TX 9:52AM June 29, 2009

Now a new combination of forces is impelling change. The necessity today is to encourage people to continue to work in ways that truly use their talents to support the economy as well as themselves. It is essential that those who have a strong need and desire to work in this new way have every chance to realize that objective and every opportunity to use their accumulated human and social capital in areas where it matters most....demonstrating the potential of an encore career.

Boomers define ourselves by what we do for a living. Our career reflects innate abilities, goals, creativity, attitudes toward others and a host of other mysterious variables. In the skewed path to fulfillment, it's human nature to taste many jobs and experiment with new careers before we settle on something we are passionate about. The best we can strive for is finding something we love doing early on so we can devote the rest of our lives to excelling at it.

Both unemployed and employed boomers, who are planning to work before and/or after retirement, would be wise to learn some effective career transition tips ( www.JobCoachTips.com ) to pay attention to long before he or she is walked out of their workplace.

John Agno of MI 11:45AM November 28, 2008

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