Australia's Male Baby Boomers Could be in for a
Tough Emotional Time During Retirement
They are much more likely than women to risk being
lonely and isolated in retirement
June 2, 2009 - Men are planning for their financial
security in retirement but not for their happiness, according to an
Australian survey revealing that more women than men plan for their
health and leisure interests before they stop working.
Published in the Journal of Psychology and Aging,
the survey suggests men could find retirement lonely and isolating
unless they build social and leisure networks before they leave the
workforce, says the report's co-author, UNSW psychologist, Dr Joanne
Earl. The report's findings are based on a survey of 377 men and women
aged 50-66 years.
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"Our finding is significant because a person's
level of leisure involvement during their working years tends to predict
their involvement during retirement," Dr Earl says. "People are less
likely to start new activities after retirement, so getting involved in
activities and social activities pre-retirement make good sense.
"If the men we surveyed are representative,
Australia's male Baby Boomers could be in for a tough time during
retirement," says Dr Earl. "There is a strong emphasis in society to
plan and save money for retirement but I think the bigger questions are:
'What am I saving for?' and, 'What do I really want to do when I
retire?'."
Employers should be helping workers to plan for all
facets of their retirement, not just their financial futures, according
to Dr Earl: "If working people approaching retirement were helped to
answer these types of questions, they could plan more adequately for a
satisfying future beyond work."
ABS data reveals that 48 percent of full-time
workers plan to switch to part-time work before they retire – an
indication that employers need career development programs to assist
mature age workers to transition to part-time work before they leave the
paid workforce.
Dr Earl and her UNSW colleague PhD student Alexa
Muratore have developed a measure to assist people to consider the range
of activities necessary for retirement planning. Seventy percent (70%)
of people completing the survey have said it helped them identify
aspects of retirement worth considering. The survey can be completed
online:
click here
Other key survey findings
● Older workers are more likely to plan
financially for their retirement than younger workers.
● High income workers are less likely to plan
their post-retirement pursuits than lower-income workers.
● Women and with higher income and education
levels were more likely to engage in health-promoting activities than
men, workers with lower incomes and those with less education.
Retirement intentions – ABS data (source: 2007
Survey of Employment Arrangements, Retirement and Superannuation,
Catalogue no. 6361.0)
● 7.7 million Australians are aged 45 years and
over.
● 3.3 million people aged 45 and over are in
full-time employment. More than 3 million people aged 45 and over are
retired.
● Eighty-five percent (85%) of working
Australians aged 45 and over plan to retire from the workforce in the
next 20 years. The remainder (15%) doesn't plan to retire.
● Full-time workers represent 71% of workers
planning to retire in the next 20 years. Of these, nearly one-third
(32%) plan to continue working full-time until they retire from the
workforce, while nearly half (48%) plan to switch to part-time work
before retiring.
● The transition plans of full-time employed men
and women who intend to retire is similar: 33 per cent of men and 29 per
cent of women plan to continue working full-time work before retiring.
Forty-seven per cent of men and 51 per cent of women plan to work
part-time before they retire.