EBRI 2008年近期退休人员调查:调查结果报告。

EBRI issue brief Pub Date : 2008-07-01
Ruth Helman, Mathew Greenwald, Craig Copeland, Jack VanDerhei, Dallas Salisbury
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引用次数: 0

摘要

了解如何延长工作寿命:2008年最近的退休人员调查是为了更好地了解可能鼓励员工推迟退休并在公司工作更长时间的工具和做法。为什么人们要退休呢?受访者通常出于以下四个原因之一从雇主那里退休:退休变得负担得起,缺乏工作满意度,希望有更多的个人或家庭时间,和/或他们自己的健康状况。要求员工延长工作时间的窗口期很窄:调查的一个主要发现是,雇主有一个长达两年的窗口期,在这段时间里,他们可能会通过提供激励措施来干预退休员工,改变他们的决定,让他们留在公司。雇主可能只需要问一下:许多退休人员表示,他们愿意接受雇主提出的让他们在公司待更长时间的办法。61%的人表示他们会积极看待这次经历。只有10%的人表示,如果有人要求他们推迟退休,他们会做出负面反应。工作激励的吸引力各不相同:调查共测试了19种可能鼓励退休员工推迟退休的激励措施。其中四项似乎特别有可能成功:一半的退休人员(48%)表示,真正需要一项任务的感觉,会极大或非常有效地鼓励他们推迟退休。此外,在那些把这列为最有效的两大激励措施之一的人中,72%的人表示,这可能促使他们至少在公司多呆两年。拥有固定收益养老金的退休人员中,有一半在兼职工作时获得全额养老金,这实际上会推迟他们的退休时间(50%),几乎同样多的人在兼职工作时获得部分养老金(44%)。在被评为最有效的两项激励措施的人中,有70%的人表示,如果向他们提供这项激励措施,他们可能会至少再待两年(72%的人选择全额养老金,71%的人选择部分养老金)。然而,这将需要修改联邦法律,而其他几项与薪酬相关的激励措施可能几乎同样令人信服。38%的人表示,如果能够按季节或按合同工作,就能有效地鼓励他们推迟退休。在将这列为两大激励因素之一的受访者中,超过四分之三(77%)的人表示,这可能促使他们在公司待上两年或更长时间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
EBRI 2008 recent retirees survey: report of findings.

Understanding how to achieve longer work lives: The 2008 Recent Retirees Survey was undertaken to better understand the tools and practices that might encourage workers to postpone their retirement and remain longer with their company. Why do people retire when they do? Respondents typically retired from employers for one of four reasons: retirement becomes affordable, lack of job satisfaction, a desire for more personal or family time, and/or their own health status. Narrow window for asking people to work longer: One of the major findings from the survey is that employers have a narrow window of up to two years in which they may be able to intervene to change retiring workers' decisions by offering them incentives to remain with the company. Employers may just need to ask: Many retirees report they would have been open to an approach from their employer asking them to stay longer with the company. Sixty-one percent say they would have viewed the experience positively. Just 10 percent indicate they would have reacted negatively to an approach asking them to delay their retirement. Work incentives vary in appeal: The survey tested a total of 19 possible incentives that might encourage retiring workers to postpone retirement. Four of these appear especially likely to be successful: Half of retirees (48 percent) indicate that feeling truly needed for an assignment would have been extremely or very effective in encouraging them to delay their retirement. Moreover, of those ranking this as one of the top two most effective incentives, 72 percent say it might have prompted them to stay at least two more years with the company. Half of retirees with a defined benefit pension state receiving a full pension while working part time would have been effective in delaying their retirement (50 percent), and almost as many feel this way about receiving a partial pension while working part time (44 percent). Seven in 10 of those rating each among the top two most effective incentives report they would likely have stayed at least two more years if it had been offered to them (72 percent for full pension, 71 percent for partial pension). However, this would necessitate a change in federal law and several other compensation-related incentives may be almost as compelling. Thirty-eight percent report that being able to work seasonally or on a contract basis would have been effective in encouraging them to delay retirement. Among those rating this as one of the top two incentives, more than three-quarters (77 percent) say it might have prompted them to stay two years or more with the company.

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