I have 26 years here, although I've been in several different divisions. I'm eligible to retire in about 4 years but may stay a little longer to increase my pension annuity, add to retirement savings, and so forth.
Natter 73: Chuck Norris only wishes he could Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I've been in the same department for 8 years, but that covers 3 different buildings, so multiple new desks. I'm hoping to go to another department, which should have more upward mobility.
In academia the problem is convincing people to retire. At my university, if you agree to retire at 65, they will continue paying your salary (and retirement contributions) for five years, even though you are retired and have no responsibilities.
Most people don't take the deal. A few get a job at another university and collect two salaries. But hardly anyone actually retires until they get sick and unable to work sometime in their 70's.
It's making universities around the country very top-heavy.
If you retire in academia, they take away your office!
The longest I have worked in one place is 6 years. The longest I have ever lived in one place continually is also 6 years.
It's making universities around the country very top-heavy.
They could take a page out of the Unseen University playbook and allow job candidates to create their own openings.
Something I've been wondering: How difficult does the average person's workday get when they're 65? At what age does the average person find doing their job too difficult? At what age does the average person "feel like" retiring (regardless of whether they are financially able to or not)?
Obviously the type of job is a huge factor here, but I'm trying to get a general sense....
This is why the increases to the Social Security age are so pernicious. It's one thing for a prof or many white collar workers to cling to their desk for an extra five or seven years if they choose. It's a very different story in a lot of other jobs.
Yeah. Plus wealthy people tend to live a lot longer than poor people, so I assume they'd be better able to handle working longer too.
I agree with Brenda. It's no accident that the increases in SS age have been made by white collar legislators, not by laborers.
My stepfather was a dentist in private practice, and fully retired at about 75, when due to a neuropathy he stopped having the hand control to do the work of dentistry. Financially, he could have retired much sooner. My father (a doctor) retired as soon as he was financially able (kids graduated from college). He's 68 and could certainly still do the work. My in-laws are both 75 and were both accountants and are in fine health and could probably still do their last office jobs if they had to, but they were happy to retire when they did, at standard retirement age (65-67ish).