Journal Pioneer

Staying on the job

Older Canadians working through golden years: census (Census-Working-Seniors)

- BY MICHELLE MCQUIGGE

The three months of Bill VanGorder’s retirement were among the longest of his career. Lured by the promise of relaxation and spare time, the Halifax resident thought he’d relish the opportunit­y to walk away from an executive position and enjoy the fruits of his labour. But restlessne­ss and a desire to keep contributi­ng drove him back to the job market within weeks, and he was ensconced in a different corporate office three months after relinquish­ing his old one.

In the four years that followed, a global economic crisis ate into VanGorder’s retirement savings, making the prospect of ongoing work both attractive and inevitable.

Eventually, he decided to go into business for himself, allowing the flexibilit­y of both a stable work life and the perks of retirement - making VanGorder, 74, a prototype of the new brand of retiree. The latest census data from Statistics Canada show more and more Canadians are choosing to eschew the traditiona­l retirement age, whether for their health, their finances or just for the fun of it.

More than 53 per cent of Canadian men aged 65 were working in some form in 2015, including 22.9 per cent who worked fulltime throughout the year, compared with 37.8 and 15.5 per cent, respective­ly, in 1995, the census numbers show.

At the age of 70, nearly three in 10 men did some sort of work in 2015, twice the proportion of 20 years earlier. Full-time work was at 8.8 per cent, up from 5.4 per cent in 1995.

The shift is even more dramatic for women, a reflection of their escalating role in the workforce. Some 38.8 per cent of senior women worked in 2015, twice the proportion of 1995, while the percentage of women working at 70 more than doubled over the same 20-year period.

The numbers show it’s high time for government­s and businesses to re-evaluate the way they view Canada’s senior citizens, VanGorder said. “One of the great problems we have ... is the myth that because our population is older than the rest of the country, that’s a terrible thing and we’re a terrible draw on resources,’’ he said in an interview. Demographe­r David Foot said their impact is not as noticeable as it was when they first began to enter the workforce decades ago, since their ranks have slowly been thinned by health problems and even death. But mounting financial pressures and increasing life expectancy are forcing those that remain to work longer than previous generation­s.

That prospect, Foot said, puts a strain on people’s financial resources.

Foot said the current crop of retirees are more likely to have a stable, defined-benefit pension plan, unlike future generation­s forced to make do with a defined-contributi­on plan - if any.

As a result, Foot suggested

most working seniors will only defer their retirement­s by up to five years, and are likely to prefer

part-time work - a trend already borne out by Wednesday’s numbers.

 ?? TED PRITCHARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Bill VanGorder prepares for his daily walk outside his Halifax home Friday, Nov. 24, 2017. The three months of Bill VanGorder’s retirement were among the longest of his career.
TED PRITCHARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Bill VanGorder prepares for his daily walk outside his Halifax home Friday, Nov. 24, 2017. The three months of Bill VanGorder’s retirement were among the longest of his career.

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