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As
Worker Shortage Increases, So Will Incentives to Keep Boomers
on the Job
For
several years now, various agencies and academics have predicted
a systemic labor shortage that will create a labor shortage
over the next 25-30 years as the gap between Baby Boomers
and entrants of college-educated workers widens due to the
Boomers' mass retirements.
There
are plenty of arguments over this theory, but employers
are acting now to keep older workers in their jobs just
a little longer. Some Boomers are finding out their bosses
don't want them to retire or are willing to make interesting
compromises to give them an incentive to stay on full- or
part-time. In a survey of older workers in the July
2008 EBRI Issue Brief, published by the nonpartisan Employee
Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), 29 percent of workers
said that feeling truly needed for an assignment was one
of the top three most effective draws for staying on the
job. Other incentives that ranked highly include:
- Receiving
a full pension while working part time;
- A
pay increase;
- Continuing
company-subsidized health insurance at the same level
as full-time workers, and
- Receiving
a partial pension while working part time.
So
what would convince you to stay on the job or un-retire
if your employer comes calling again? It makes sense to
talk over such issues with a tax professional and a financial
planner. No matter what the incentives put in front of you,
there are key issues to consider:
Make
working retirement a variable in your planning:
If you're 5-10 years away from retirement and reviewing
your retirement thinking so far, it makes sense to ask yourself
under what conditions you'd return to the workplace. You
obviously need to know based on current projections how
much money you're likely to gather from savings and other
retirement resources. Then you need to consider how much
money you'd be satisfied making in your post-retirement
working life.
Consider
how a return to the workplace will affect you personally
and socially: If you're 40, 50 or 60, working right
now probably feels like breathing - when have you not worked?
But it may not be the best option after a year or two out
of the workplace.
How
will it affect your taxes? Tax issues shouldn't
determine your ambitions and goals, but it's important to
consider the impact work-related income will have on your
retirement. Many retirees find that it doesn't take much
post-retirement, work-related income to tip them into a
higher bracket. Look for ways to control the taxes you'll
ultimately pay, including continued participation in qualified
plans, IRAs, and other tax-favored accumulation vehicles
and using annuity income to fill the gap between the beginning
of the "post-retirement" period and the age when full Social
Security benefits can be drawn without an offset for employment
income.
Consider
what earnings will do to all your retirement payments: If
you are planning to work, consider not only the tax impact,
but also how that might change the way you plan to draw
on your retirement savings and investments as well as Social
Security. If you are planning to work, it's important you
consider delaying receipt of those benefits for as long
as you can.
Look
at all the incentives: The top incentives luring
experienced workers back to the workplace may be very attractive
to you, or not attractive at all. Do some thinking about
this. If you get the call, be prepared with a counterproposal
of what would really convince you to come back.
Consider
insurance issues: If a retiree returning to the
workforce is already receiving Medicare or covered by a
"Medigap" policy, they may be able to lower their costs
or improve their coverage by accepting group coverage as
primary underwriter of their medical expenses. Since people
over age 55 are generally the greatest users of the healthcare
system, coverage issues are particularly important to run
by a financial expert.
Keep
saving: If you return to the workplace, see what
you can do to take advantage of your new employer's 401(k)
plan or any other tax-advantaged retirement savings benefit,
particularly if an employer matches your contribution. Don't
miss a chance to enhance your retirement savings.
November 2008
- This column was authored in cooperation with Financial
Planning Association.
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