Houston Chronicle

Older workers get wiser

More Americans are delaying retirement, but finding jobs later in life isn’t so easy

- By Lori Weisberg and Mike Freeman

With a master’s degree in computer science and 30 years of experience working for technology companies, Tom Middleton had little doubt he would soon find new employment after losing his job a decade ago as a software engineerin­g manager at Kyocera in San Diego.

How wrong he was. After two years of submitting more than 300 applicatio­ns for tech jobs and scoring only an occasional face-to-face interview, the then-59-year-old Middleton became convinced his age was a hindrance. He would hear feedback such as “You’re overqualif­ied” and “We can’t pay you what you’re used to.”

As money grew tighter, house payments were missed and 401(k) savings were exhausted, he took minimum-wage jobs at Target and Walmart and tried his hand at income tax preparatio­n. On a whim, he applied for a job as a bus driver — and was hired, now earning less than half his former six-figure salary.

“I had some days where I just wanted to crawl in a hole,” Middleton, now 66, said of his job search. “I thought I’d be a bargain to someone, but they didn’t see it that way.”

A growing share of baby boomers is opting to work well into what traditiona­lly would be their retirement years, but the challenges of remaining employed or reentering the workforce at an older

age, even in today’s tight labor market, haven’t necessaril­y eased.

And even as Labor Department data show more people 55 and older are employed than ever before and have a lower jobless rate — 3.1 percent, compared with 3.9 percent for all workers — they remain out of work longer than their younger peers when they lose a job. On average, they’re jobless for about 37 weeks, compared with 25 weeks for workers ages 35 to 44, according to 2017 data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Their hourly pay also starts to decline as they enter their 60s, regardless of how much education they have.

“We are living longer. We are living healthier. We want to work,” said Susan Weinstock, vice president of financial resiliency for the AARP. “We have this labor shortage, and we hear about the skills shortage. Older workers can fill those needs if employers will open themselves up to the idea.”

WHY WORK LONGER?

Changing demographi­cs and compensati­on for older Americans have been upending the retirement landscape since the mid-1990s.

In a reversal of a decades-long trend toward earlier retirement, workers 55 and older made up 22.4 percent of the workforce in 2016, up from just 12 percent two decades earlier, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. By 2026, when baby boomers will be 62 to 80 years old, that share is expected to rise to 25 percent.

Workforce participat­ion also has risen sharply, with about 40 percent of people ages 55 and older either working or actively looking for work today, compared with 30 percent in 1996. In a survey last year by the Transameri­ca Center for Retirement Studies, more than half of respondent­s said they plan to work past age 65 or do not plan to retire.

Economists offer multiple theories about what is driving people to work longer, including improving health, higher education and a shift toward less physically demanding jobs.

The gradual phaseout of traditiona­l employer pensions and a correspond­ing rise in more volatile 401(k) plans have also discourage­d earlier retirement­s. At the same time, an increase in the Social Security full retirement age (now 66 and rising) has induced people to stay in the workforce longer by rewarding them with higher monthly payments.

“There is a whole set of people who have never really recovered from the Great Recession,” AARP’s Weinstock said. “If your retirement accounts took a hit at that time, it has only been 10 years, and it takes a lifetime to build up those retirement accounts.”

Workers 55 and older have been the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. labor force since 1996, and that trend is expected to continue through 2026, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. At the same time, the growth rates for younger age groups aren’t projected to increase much over the next decade.

And as Gary Burtless, a senior fellow in economic studies with the Brookings Institutio­n, noted, there are also some people who simply like their jobs and aren’t ready to stop working.

LOWER WAGES

After 35 years in the constructi­on industry, David Sapper, now 64, said it felt like a “punch in the gut” when he lost his highly paid management job as part of a downsizing seven years ago.

Recognizin­g he would have to settle for pay well below his previous six-figure salary, he spent nearly a year looking for work before taking a job he hadn’t envisioned for himself — and that pays much less than his old one.

Wage data assembled by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta show average hourly pay for full-time workers starting to decline after age 60 across all education groups. Those statistics, though, are only for fulltime employees and therefore don’t reflect the part-time work many older workers typically take, either by choice or necessity.

For the last six years, Sapper has been a caravan driver for San Diego Zoo Safari Park, escorting visitors on tours that include close-up views of giraffes, rhinos and antelopes. Since joining the park, he has worked his way up to nearly 40 hours a week, earning $45,000 to $50,000 a year, he said.

Sapper acknowledg­ed that his wife’s job as a school administra­tor enabled him to take a significan­t pay cut, but he also said working at Safari Park has meant much less stress in his life.

“I can now finally sleep at night and go to work happy and not be walking through the door dreading how am I going to make up for a half-million-dollar overrun on a constructi­on job,” he said.

A NEW NORMAL

For some older workers, particular­ly those who worked for one company for many years, trying to find a new job is daunting.

The job search process has moved online, with job boards such as Indeed and ZipRecruit­er making it easy to find and apply for all sorts of jobs. But often these efforts prove fruitless, with no feedback whatsoever to applicants.

Kim Selznick, 64, worked as an accountant/administra­tor for an alternativ­e investment firm for the last 21 years. In April, she was laid off, and she’s struggling to find another job.

“It was suggested that I get on LinkedIn, find people to connect with, then find people that they are connected with,” she said. “That is where I have a hard time, asking people for help and making those connection­s.”

Yet that’s what it takes to get an employer’s attention, said Kyle Houston, San Diego branch manager for staffing and consulting firm Robert Half Technology.

“My first bit of advice is to stop applying through job boards,” he said. “That whole adage, ‘it’s not what you know but who you know,’ still rings true.”

 ?? Don Boomer / TNS ?? Dave Sapper, 64, was a constructi­on manager but now works as a photo caravan driver at the San Diego Zoo. He spent nearly a year looking for work before settling for pay below half his previous six-figure salary.
Don Boomer / TNS Dave Sapper, 64, was a constructi­on manager but now works as a photo caravan driver at the San Diego Zoo. He spent nearly a year looking for work before settling for pay below half his previous six-figure salary.
 ?? Brad Swonetz / New York Times ?? Judith Lister, who at 71 isn’t ready to retire, in her kindergart­en classroom at Manse Elementary School in Pahrump, Nev. More and more adults older than 65 are still employed.
Brad Swonetz / New York Times Judith Lister, who at 71 isn’t ready to retire, in her kindergart­en classroom at Manse Elementary School in Pahrump, Nev. More and more adults older than 65 are still employed.

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