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Unretirement :  how baby boomers are changing the way we think about work, community, and the good life. Cover Image E-book E-book

Unretirement : [electronic resource] : how baby boomers are changing the way we think about work, community, and the good life. Chris Farrell.

Farrell, Chris. (Author).

Summary:

The budget battles of recent years have amplified the warnings of demographic doomsayers who predicted that a wave of baby boomers would bleed America dry, bankrupting Social Security and Medicare as they faded into an impoverished old age. On the contrary, argues award-winning journalist Chris Farrell, we are instead on the verge of a broad, positive transformation of our economy and society.The old idea of "retirement"—a word that means withdrawal, describing a time when people gave up productive employment and shrank their activities—was a short-lived historical anomaly. Humans have always found meaning and motivation in work and community, Farrell notes, and the boomer generation, poised to live longer in better health than any before, is already discovering unretirement—extending their working lives, often with new careers, entrepreneurial ventures, and volunteer service.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781620401583 (electronic bk)
  • Physical Description: 1 online resource

Content descriptions

Reproduction Note:
Electronic reproduction. New York : Bloomsbury Press, 2014. Requires OverDrive Read (file size: N/A KB) or Adobe Digital Editions (file size: 330 KB) or Amazon Kindle (file size: N/A KB).
Subject: Nonfiction.
Business.
Genre: Electronic books.

Summary: The budget battles of recent years have amplified the warnings of demographic doomsayers who predicted that a wave of baby boomers would bleed America dry, bankrupting Social Security and Medicare as they faded into an impoverished old age. On the contrary, argues award-winning journalist Chris Farrell, we are instead on the verge of a broad, positive transformation of our economy and society.The old idea of "retirement"—a word that means withdrawal, describing a time when people gave up productive employment and shrank their activities—was a short-lived historical anomaly. Humans have always found meaning and motivation in work and community, Farrell notes, and the boomer generation, poised to live longer in better health than any before, is already discovering unretirement—extending their working lives, often with new careers, entrepreneurial ventures, and volunteer service.

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