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<-- Newsletter Home
That flood
of retiring baby boomers is just a few years away...
San José,
Costa Rica, Thursday, Aug. 9, 2007, Vol. 7, No. 157
By A.M. Costa Rica
http://www.amcostarica.com
Anyone who
was wondering where all those expats will come from to fill
those Pacific condos and build out those lots need not worry.
But the trend spells trouble for North American businesses.
In 2011, the so-called baby boomer generation of Americans born
after World War II will hit 65 and start looking at its options
for retirement. While more than 78 million baby boomers are
contemplating how to spend their golden years, businesses are
bracing themselves for labor shortages and the biggest brain
drain in history.
According to a recent study by the Conference Board, a global
research and business group, organizations are not prepared for
the retirement of the baby boomers. Diane Piktialis is a baby
boomer working with the Mature Workforce Program at the
Conference Board.
"The baby boomer population is going to be retiring in record
numbers and the number of workers coming up through the labor
force behind them is not enough to fill all the positions that
are going to be left vacant," she said. "Companies not only
don't have enough bodies to replace retiring workers, but most
organizations have not formalized any programs to transfer
knowledge from those mature workers to others coming up through
the organization."
A baby boomer is someone born in the United States between 1946
and 1964. After World War II, the United States experienced an
unusual increase in birth rates, now commonly described as the
baby boom. Piktialis says that, instead of worrying about the
retirement of the baby boomers, companies should start finding
ways of keeping them on board.
The good news is that while baby boomers may be old enough to
retire and cash-in on their benefits, most of them don't want to
give up active lives. Many are willing to go on working as long
as it's on a part-time or flexible schedule.
Some will do so when they move their lives to Costa Rica and
other offshore retirement havens. They will be assisted by
improved Internet connections.
"All of the studies show that somewhere between 70 and 80
percent of these baby boomers, when asked, said that they would
like to continue working in some capacity," she explained.
"Part of the reason is the fact that they are better educated
and healthier than in the past. People want to stay engaged.
They want to contribute. They want to keep their minds
intellectually challenged."
To tap into the potential of the baby boomer generation,
according to Piktialis, companies and non-profit groups need to
rethink their approach to recruitment and start including older
people in their search for talent.
Stephen Kotlikoff, a Boston University economics professor, says
that the major impact of the baby boomers' retirement will be
financial. He says once they retire and no longer are earning a
salary and paying taxes, policy makers will have to find ways to
finance government programs in a fiscally responsible way.
"The real issue with the baby boomers retirement is that there
is going to be a lot of old people to support relative to the
number of workers that are making Social Security contributions.
We are currently handing out $30,000 per old person in Social
Security, Medicare, Medicaid benefits. And when the baby boomers
retire, that number in today's dollar will be about $50,000.
You are
talking about close to $3 trillion, $4 trillion a year in
outlays."
The government and the private sector have been busy for years
trying to find solutions to the problems the retirement of baby
boomers will cause. They have less than five years. |