SalemNews.com, Salem, MA

Business

April 19, 2007

Older workers emerging as hot commodities

Older workers, those age 55 and up, are doing a lot more these days than greeting shoppers at Wal-Mart or serving Big Macs at McDonald's.

They're becoming integral parts of the work force at health care, telecommunications, financial services and other companies. That's because smart executives looking to the future understand that there is a labor shortage on the way in the country. The only way to get the work done, and keep their companies growing, is to find ways to employ those who have retired or want a second career.

Nationally, in five years, nearly 20 percent of the total U.S. work force will be age 55 or older, up from just under 13 percent in 2000, according to forecasts by AARP.

More older people, some already retired, want to go back into the labor pool and do jobs that are different from what they did in their earlier careers.

The AARP national survey found 69 percent of individuals between the ages of 45 and 74 who are either working or looking for work plan to work in some capacity during their retirement. Also, 68 percent of workers between the ages of 50 and 70 who have not yet retired reported that they plan to work in some capacity into their retirement years or never retire.

The biggest reason is they need the money.

"Financial security is the main reason so many older people plan to stay in the work force," Edwin Refern Jr., AARP's national program consultant on the older worker, said last week.

"Boomers don't have enough money to retire," he said.

He added that as the labor supply dwindles, there would be competition among employers for talented older workers - something the more forward-looking executives are already thinking about.

Brandon Melton, senior vice president of human resources at Lifespan, a Rhode Island-based hospital network, said it has done a labor supply forecast from 2007 to 2025 and projected huge shortages, some of 25 to 30 percent, in nursing, diagnostic imaging and management. He explained that baby boomers will be leaving the work force just as the demand for health care services continues to increase, requiring more workers.

He said the hospital is working with job trainers, colleges and others to train workers with health care skills. He also recognized that Lifespan may have to amend its work rules to add flexible hours to attract older workers.



"We see a flat labor supply to 2010 and then a decline," he said.

nnn

John Kostrzewa writes for the Providence Journal.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Business

AP Video
And the Winner for Best Super Bowl Ad Is... Unemployment Rate Down to 8.3% Hiring Burst Pushes Jobless Rate Down to 8.3% Status Update: Facebook to Go Public, Raise $5B Pfizer Recalls 1M Birth Control Packs Pfizer Recalls 1M Birth Control Packs After Mixup $10 Billion Deutsche Boerse, NYSE Merger Blocked Stocks Have Best January Since '97 Serbia Buys US Steel Plant for $1 Will Investors 'Like' Facebook After IPO? Fed Moves Mean Little Interest for Savers Fed Unlikely to Raise Rates Until at Least 2014 RIM's Future Lies With New CEO's Decisions Lagarde to Europe: Boost Growth and Protections Tom Curley Announces His Retirement AP CEO Tom Curley Announces His Retirement Apple Sets Its Site on Electronic Textbooks Kodak Files for Ch. 11 Bankruptcy Protection 7 Charged in $78M Insider Trading Case Web Protest Shows Hollywood-Silicon Valley Rift
NDN Video
Super Bowl ads: The best and the worst Video of M.I.A's Obscene Halftime Gesture Brown: 'Eli Manning is better than Tom Brady' Gisele's Super Bowl Potty Mouth Runaway Goat Leads Police on Wild Chase Randy Travis Arrested Ping Pong Baby Phenomenon LeAnn Rimes Recovers From Surgery Katy Perry Kisses a Boy at Pre-Super Bowl Concert Raw Video: Blast Kills Utah Mom's Husband, Kids Online OT: Super Bowl XLVI recap Airbag saves snowboarder from avalanche Super Bowl 2012 Security Measures Raw Video: Santorum Visits Sweater Vest Factory Interview with Ron Paul SB XLIV: Playmate Picks Demi Moore Is in Rehab SB XLVI: Game Preview Karina Smirnoff's Bikini Body Romney Takes Strong Lead in Nevada GOP Victory
Comments Trcker