People who aren't prepared for retirement at age 62 aren't more
likely than others to keep working, but those who do tend to benefit
financially, a recent paper found
July 10, 2020 By
Emile Hallez
Working
contract or gig jobs into one’s 60s has become a way for many people to retire
gradually, and such arrangements are linked to greater retirement
security, a recent
study found.
People
who remain in the workforce past 62 in jobs that
don’t provide health insurance or retirement plans tend to do
so after leaving career positions or because they have spent a lifetime in jobs
without benefits and have little financial choice but to keep working.
A paper
published this month by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College
examined how workers’ financial preparedness for retirement relates to their
decision to continue working past age 62. The authors also looked at whether
continuing to work actually helped people become able to retire.
“Holding
nontraditional jobs — those that provide neither health insurance nor
retirement benefits — at younger ages likely hurts retirement security relative
to traditional jobs,” authors Matthew Rutledge and Gal Wettstein wrote. “But
nontraditional work might be helpful to those looking to extend their careers
for financial reasons.”
Nontraditional
jobs include anything from lucrative contract work for people in highly
specialized fields to part-time retail positions. Either way, having such work
later in life generally improved people’s ability to retire, according to the
study.
Of
course, many people are
unable to continue working for health reasons.
Among
career workers in jobs offering perks like 401(k)s, those who had saved too
little to retire comfortably were no more likely than peers with adequate
savings to work in nontraditional jobs later in life. But for those who were
financially unprepared to retire, working such jobs boosted their ability to
retire “by at least as much as those who stay in traditional jobs,” according
to the study.
“In fact,
some evidence suggests that those who transition to nontraditional work have
greater retirement wealth, especially business income, than those who stay in
traditional work or who opt not to keep working,” the authors wrote. “Among
those workers who are at risk of not maintaining their pre-retirement income
level in retirement, however, nontraditional work appears to move them closer
to retirement security.”
While gig
jobs and other employment without benefits can allow people to save up for
retirement in their years approaching it, just staying in the workforce can
help improve retirement security because it lets people delay claiming Social
Security or taking payments from their retirement accounts, according to the
paper.
“The
boost to retirement security from nontraditional jobs might be especially
valuable to those who reach age 62 underprepared for retirement,” the authors
wrote.
There are
two caveats to the findings, the authors noted. The study found that people
ages 67 to 68 improved their financial situations by virtue of working in
nontraditional jobs, but those workers represent a small sample. Secondly, the
results do not necessarily show a causal relationship, they wrote.
The study
analyzed data from the University of Michigan’s Health
and Retirement Study from 2002 to 2016 for several waves of
workers between the ages of 61 and 68.
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