Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Desire to work past 65 can be a problem

Health and a variety of additional factors often get in the way of job expectatio­ns

- By Adam Allington

YPSILANTI, MICH. >> Earl Johnston was 12 when he got his first job, a paper route that he quickly expanded by “buying out” additional routes from other, less industriou­s boys.

After high school, he enrolled in a programto become an industrial electricia­n.

“With that journeyman’s card in my back pocket, I had never had trouble finding work — ever,” he said.

Like many people in the prime of their working life Johnston, now 56, always thought he would have plenty set aside for retirement, and ifhe didn’t, he could always work a little longer. “At least up to 65,” he thought.

What Johnston didn’t plan for was the degenerati­ve spinal condition that made being on his feet for a 12-hour shift all but impossible.

“I could bemaking lots and lots of money right now, but nobody in manufactur­ing is going to hire a 50-something guy who can’t stay on his feet,” he said.

Johnston’s story might be chalked up to simple bad luck. But it serves as an example of the rapidly changing expectatio­ns that seniors have for being able to work well past traditiona­l retirement age, and in some cases, dismissing the idea of retirement altogether.

According to the 2015 Employment Benefit Research Institute Confidence Survey, the percentage of workers aged 25 and over who planned on working past 65 has increased steadily from 11 percent in 1991 to 36 percent in 2015.

But those expectatio­ns aren’t always achievable.

The University of Michigan

Health and Retirement Study found that 37 percent of respondent­s didn’t reach the retirement age they had set when they were 58.

“The first, andmaybe the most obvious explanatio­n people give for early retirement is health,” said Boston College research economist Geoff Sanzenbach­er, co-author of a working paper investigat­ing causes for this mismatch between retirement expectatio­ns and reality.

“People don’t fully grasp

how big an impact health has on your ability towork. You may be 58 and have some arthritis, but you don’t fully appreciate how much that could affect you going forward.”

The second most common reason was layoffs or business closings, followed by familial factors, such as a spouse retiring, he said.

The average retirement age has been inching up for years now. People are living longer, tend to be more educated and have better access to white collar jobs that don’t require a lot of manual labor. Women are also reaching older agewith more skills and longer work

histories than their mothers and grandmothe­rs.

Even as roughly twothirds of workers do make it to the age they planned to retire, a report by the Hamilton Project at Brookings Institutio­n suggests that a growing percentage of them are entering retirement on shaky financial footing.

There’s also the perception that working longer is the best way to bridge the gap between retirement needs and resources.

“It’s become a kind of Band-Aid solution to growing concerns many workers have about retirement readiness,” says Ruth Davis Konigsberg, a contributo­r

to Money.com and a director at Arden Asset Management.

“In some cases, working longer can help, and there certainly are other benefits to working longer, but we can’t just extend our working lives indefinite­ly. There is just toomuch uncertaint­y in that scenario.”

2018 was going to be a banner year for Karen Hoffmann, 64. That was the year the mortgage on her St. Louis home would be paid off, and she and her husband were planning to retire.

But Hoffman received notice late in 2015 that she was being let go from her job as a senior trainer for Verizon.

“Right now we just have to re-evaluate,” she says. “Originally we thought we could go South for the winter for a month or two, now I don’t think we’ll be able to do that.”

Between their savings and Social Security, Hoffmann estimates that she might have enough money to retire a few years early. Still, the prospect of unforeseen health care costs is unnerving. And, if she does take a newjob, for less pay, sheworries it would change her future Social Security payouts.

“Do I go look for a job? Part of me says yes, but I honestly don’t know,” Hoffmann said.

“Could I fill up my time with retirement? Sure. I have two grandkids. In that respect, being retiredwou­ld be nice. But, I don’t think I’ll ever be ready for the financial side of things.”

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 ?? ADAM ALLINGTON VIA AP ?? Earl Johnston got his first job when he was 12years old, a paper route which he quickly expanded by “buying out” additional routes from other, less industriou­s, boys.
ADAM ALLINGTON VIA AP Earl Johnston got his first job when he was 12years old, a paper route which he quickly expanded by “buying out” additional routes from other, less industriou­s, boys.

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