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Vallarta Living | April 2006
Tired of Retirement: Study Finds Retirees Returning to Work MF
| Many retirees can find retirement to be boring and need a job to keep them mentally and physically healthy. | Can't wait to escape the grind of your job and retire? Not everyone feels that way. A new study shows many potential retirees want to keep working longer.
The study finds that about 7 million previously retired Americans - or one-third of all American retirees - have returned to work for pay after an average sabbatical of one-and-a-half years. The research is based on "The Working Retired," a Putnam Investments-sponsored national survey of 1,726 retirees who returned to work.
About two-thirds of the respondents said they returned to work because they "wanted to," while the remaining one-third went back out of economic necessity.
"Our study shows retirement in the United States has already moved far beyond ending work at age 65, gold watches, and early-bird specials," said William T. Connolly, head of retail management at Putnam Investments. "For many, retirement is just a planned pause before resuming a career."
"As the study shows, retirement isn't the dream life many thought it would be," noted Connolly. "Many retirees can find retirement to be boring and need a job to keep them mentally and physically healthy."
The study found a large group of these "wanted to" workers re-entered the workforce looking for non-financial rewards. Close to half thought working might make them healthier, more energetic, and keep them in top mental form.
A major reason these retirees were able to return to work by choice was because they saved enough money. The survey found that the working retired who had a financial advisor had average assets of $621,000, more than 50 percent higher than the total group's average assets. Putnam research also found that retirees who work with advisors are 30 percent more satisfied with retirement than those without one.
"It's important, no matter how old you are, to have a retirement plan and begin saving as soon as possible," said Connolly. "Financial advisors can offer the best advice for a plan that makes the most with your money. After all, working through your seventies to pay bills is not the portrait of retirement most Americans envision."
Over the next two decades, a record number of Americans will become eligible to retire. But as the study shows, retirement is not for everyone. |
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