Finding the bright side in a graying U.S. workforce
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[January 17, 2019]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - (The opinions expressed here are those of the
author, a columnist for Reuters.)
Economists call it the "old-age dependency ratio" - a rough measure of
the balance between people who work and retirees.
The ratio compares the number of people over age 65 - classified as
“old” - with those aged 15 to 64 - and it is not headed in a healthy
direction: by 2040, there will be 2.7 working-age Americans for each
retiree, down from 4.8 in 2010.
That number from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta points toward a
shortfall of workers available to support an aging population, and it is
cited often to justify doom-and-gloom warnings about economic growth,
federal spending and the health of our social insurance programs.
But do not tell that to Chris Farrell. The senior economics contributor
to "Marketplace," American Public Media’s nationally syndicated public
radio business and economic program, is bullish on aging. Farrell is the
author of a new book, "Purpose and a Paycheck: Finding Meaning, Money,
and Happiness in the Second Half of Life," (https://bit.ly/2DcwDWg) that
seeks to upend a range of myths about old age and dependency, replacing
them with a new vision of contribution to society and purpose-driven
living.
He argues the case with convincing economic analysis and on-the-ground
reporting - interviewing dozens of older workers finding their way
forward in the labor market, and profiling companies on the leading edge
of change.
For starters, he notes that the dependency ratio itself is deeply
flawed, because it assumes everyone over age 64 has left the workforce -
and increasingly, that is not the case. Participation in the labor force
by older workers has been rising steadily in recent years. Farrell cites
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics figures showing that from 1995 to 2016,
the share of men ages 65 to 69 in the labor force rose from 28 percent
to 38 percent; for women, the figure jumped from 18 percent to 30
percent.
“I’m convinced there is large segment of people out there who think we
all just go from age 60 to 90 in one year,” Farrell told me in an
interview. “And when you look at all the research coming out of Wall
Street and many economists, their perspective is not that much
different.”
RESHAPING THE ECONOMY
Farrell sees the aging of the U.S. population not as a problem, but a
major opportunity to create a more inclusive society and vibrant
economy. He argues that a more engaged older population will shape
everyday life - everything from housing markets to public
transportation, urban design and healthcare.
“We have this image of the way life unfolds - you go to school, work and
raise children and then retire somewhere else,” he said. “Plenty of our
institutions have reflected that. But as people work longer and stay in
urban areas longer, the impact will be profound - just for one example,
older people tend to want public transportation - and so do younger
people.”
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People walk their dogs
along the beach after sunset in Cardiff, California, January 27,
2016. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
Farrell’s analysis of the labor market for older workers is especially
provocative. The Great Recession ushered in a decade of high U.S. unemployment
rates for millions who found themselves shut out of the job market by age
discrimination. And age discrimination is alive and well.
For example, a recent analysis of data from the University of Michigan Health
and Retirement Study by ProPublica and the Urban Institute found that 56 percent
of older workers are laid off at least once or leave jobs “under such
financially damaging circumstances that it’s likely they were pushed out rather
than choosing to go voluntarily.” The report also found that just one in 10 of
these workers earn as much as they did before their job losses (https://bit.ly/2SrPDVK).
Farrell acknowledges that discrimination remains a tough problem, but he argues
we are at an inflection point where employers will be forced to accommodate
older workers due to the overall tight labor market. “It’s not that employers
have suddenly become enlightened, but they will have to look at older workers
with a different eye, and think about hiring differently,” he said. “Do they
want to fulfill their missions and grow their businesses, or not?”
Farrell tells the stories of dozens of experienced workers and later-life
entrepreneurs who are forging new paths in their sixties, seventies and beyond.
He also digs up plenty of examples of companies that are rethinking their
approaches to accommodating older workers.
A small Minnesota precision machine company facing a thin pipeline of skilled
machinists has invested in new equipment to reduce the physical strain on older
workers so they can stick around longer. A healthcare company in Virginia
changed the way it calculates pension benefits to avoid penalizing workers who
cut back to part-time hours close to retirement.
“I really believe we’ve crossed the Rubicon on this problem,” he said. “Older
workers just will be looked at differently - we’ve crossed a line and can’t go
back.”
(Reporting and writing by Mark Miller in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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