Las Vegas Review-Journal

PART-TIME WORK HELPS FILL TIME FOR FORMER RETIREES

-

We see people lengthenin­g their careers.”

A Pew Research Center analysis of data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics supports that observatio­n. It reported that the proportion of Americans over age 65 who were employed, full time or part time, had climbed steadily from 12.8 percent in 2000 to 18.8 percent in 2016. More than half were working full time.

Even more people might resume working if they could find attractive options. “We asked people over 50 who weren’t working, or looking for a job, whether they’d return if the right opportunit­y came along,” Mullen said. “About half said yes.”

Why go back to work? We hear endless warnings about Americans having failed to save enough, and the need for income does motivate some returning workers.

But Maestas, using longitudin­al data from the national Health and Retirement Study, has found that the decision to resume working doesn’t usually stem from unexpected financial problems or health expenses.

“It looks like something people are doing intentiona­lly, instead of an oh-my-god response: ‘I’m running out of money; I have to go back to work,’ ” she said. “It’s much more about a choice.”

Longer lives, better health and less physically taxing jobs than in previous generation­s help provide that choice, Maestas pointed out.

“You hear certain themes: A sense of purpose. Using your brain,” she said. “And another key component is social engagement.” Earning money, while welcomed, rarely proved the primary incentive.

Michelle Wallace, who lives in Broomfield, Colo., learned about purpose over 20 frustratin­g months.

After decades in telecommun­ications, she said, she retired abruptly from a project management position in 2013, when her workplace turned chaotic and hostile.

She had saved enough to feel economical­ly secure. But without a job, “I felt like I was free-floating, bobbing along on the ocean,” she said. “I felt very ungrounded.” Friends noticed her becoming more reclusive; her doctor increased her antidepres­sants.

In 2015, she took a part-time job with a small business that supports government researcher­s. Now 69, she has no interest in retiring again. “As long as somebody wants me, I have a lot to contribute,” she said.

Most retirees who returned to work told researcher­s they had long planned to re-enter the workforce.

But among those who expected to remain retired but then changed their minds, Maestas has identified a subgroup going through “burnout and recovery.”

“Some people have a lot of stress, pressure and physical demands” in their jobs, she noted. “Their interactio­ns with people at work could be strained or hostile.” After a restorativ­e break, they can find work that suits them better.

Thana Christian, a social worker in Oakland, Calif., felt crushed by her workload at a county child protective services agency. She retired at 63 because “the job was killing me.”

For 18 months, she gardened and biked, took pottery and quilting classes, felt lonely but figured she would adjust. Then a chance conversati­on at the local senior center turned toward work. “It hit me like a thunderbol­t, how much I missed social work,” she said. “That’s who I was.”

Online, Christian quickly learned that the Kaiser Permanente Oakland Medical Center needed on-call social workers, giving them the flexibilit­y to set their own hours. Once hired, she tried various combinatio­ns and settled on working Mondays and Fridays.

“Two days a week doesn’t feel like work,” she said, now 66. “It’s an addition to my life.”

Researcher­s note that older workers have different needs. “Younger workers need the paycheck,” Mullen said. “Older jobseekers look for more autonomy, control over the pace of work. They’re less concerned about benefits. They can think about broader things, like whether the work is meaningful and stimulatin­g.”

Of course, workplaces present challenges, too.

Nearly as many older workers face repetitive tasks or physical demands as younger ones, the RAND survey found, and they report slightly less support from bosses and cooperatio­n from colleagues.

Class and education matter, too. “People with less education are in more taxing jobs,” Maestas said.

In the RAND survey, 60 percent of older college graduates who had retired said they would be interested in returning to the workforce for the right job. Just 40 percent of those without degrees felt the same way.

Still, two-thirds of older workers report satisfacti­on in work well done, a majority that includes King.

Now 69, she puts on her scrubs twice a week, providing nursing education on the night shift from 7 p.m. until 2 a.m. She feels needed, but not overwhelme­d.

“It’s perfect,” she said. “I get the ego reinforcem­ent of having people appreciate what I do. And I appreciate the downtime — now that it’s not all downtime.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States