More than two in three middle-class
boomers say that they expect their retirement will be
“drastically” different than their parents, according to
a
new study by Bankers Life and Casualty Company’s
Center for Secure Retirement. “The current generation
of seniors saw retirement as really slowing down,” says
Scott Perry, the president of
Bankers
Life and Casualty Company, a Chicago-based insurance
company. “Boomers see things differently.”
Here are four reasons boomers cited for
why their retirement will be different than their
parents’:
- We’ll keep working.
Nearly eight in ten
(78%) of boomers say they plan to work longer than
their parents did. This is driven both by necessity
and choice, says Perry. More than half (57%) will
work in retirement because of financial concerns,
but the remaining boomers want to do it to stay
active or have something meaningful to do with their
time.
- We’re staying fit.
More than eight in ten (81%)
of boomers say that staying physically fit is very
important to them. Whereas older generations looked
at retirement as a time of extreme relaxation,
“boomers realize they’re going to live longer so
they’re concerned about keeping active to protect
their health,” Perry says. “They also want to stay
in good physical health so that they can fully enjoy
their retirement years.”
- We’ll never be
irrelevant.
Seventy-seven percent of boomers think it’s
important to keep up with technology in retirement.
(On the other hand, older generations looked at
retirement as a kind of unplugging from the grid,
Perry says.) A big part of this is so they can keep
up with their children and grandchildren by doing
things like sharing pictures, says Perry. Another
big factor is that they want to remain independent
for as long as possible, he says. So rather than
have to call someone for help when, say, they can’t
figure out how to email a photo from their iPhone,
they want to just be able to go online and look it
up.
- We’ll keep on learning.
More than 60% of
boomers say it’s very important that they learn a
new skill in retirement (just 21% of them think that
this was important to their parents though), and
more than one in three wants to go back to school.
All in all, “active lifestyle defines
the new retirement,” the study concludes. So whether
it’s learning to speak Spanish, snagging the new Andriod
phone or doing morning yoga in the park, we can expect
boomers’ “retirement” to look, well, not much like
“retirement.”