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Productive Aging and the Future of Retirement
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13863 |
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Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
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Date : |
12 / 1988 |
3,014 Words |
| Author
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Malcolm H. Morrison Malcolm H. Morrison is a professional lecturer in aging and
public policy at George Washington University in Washington,
D.C. He is an internationally recognized authority in
employment and retirement policies and formerly served as an
adviser to the secretary and under secretary of labor on
retirement issues. Morrison is the author of numerous
publications on aging, work, and retirement, including
Economics of Aging: The Future of Retirement (Van Nostrand
Reinhold, 1982). The opinion and conclusions expressed are
solely those of the author and should not be attributed to any
organization. |
What will be the productive economic potential of older persons in the future aging society? Can the aging hope to make meaningful and significant contributions to both economic and social productivity as we approach and enter the twenty-first century? What are the forces that will affect this potential and what are the key choices that society must make to achieve a productive aging society?
These concerns, along with growing interest in employment alternatives by some older persons, are leading some to challenge the traditional meaning of "retirement" as a complete cessation from work and to suggest that retirement may become an inappropriate description of future societal patterns; that is, in the future the meaning of retirement will change or a different social definition of aging will be needed.
After many years of effort and many social policy decisions, we have clearly developed an extremely beneficial set of choices for older persons which allow most to limit or entirely refrain from work if they choose to do so. As it turns out, some of our policies may have caused the pendulum to swing too far away from productivity in favor of leisure life-styles for the aging. However, a reversal of the pendulum in the opposite direction is not necessarily desirable either, and clearly would not be a popular policy for most older people today.
Thus, in considering the future productive roles of older people, it is important to clarify views of work and retirement based on both today's actual circumstances, which of course are influenced by past policies, and tomorrow's possible trends which can be influenced by future
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