back to homepage Join Our Mailing List Sitemap Contact us   
  Previous Back to Statistics Main Page Next  

The Cornell Careers Center found that of non-retired older workers whom worked "44 hours per week on average," that "nearly half (48%) of these workers would prefer to work significantly fewer hours--eight hours less on average." (Figure I-6, p.6)

Moen, P., Erickson, A. W., Agarwal, M., Fields, V., & Todd, L. (2000). The Cornell retirement and well-being study. Final Report. Ithaca, NY: Bronfenbrenner Life Course Center at Cornell University.

"The Cornell Retirement and Well-Being Study investigates the transition to-and life in-retirement. The focus is on pathways in and out of paid work and unpaid community service, as well as their implications for well-being. Most studies of retirement have viewed it as a one-way, onetime exit, and have examined men’s experiences exclusively. By contrast, we look at men and women, interviewing a large (n=664) sample of 50-72 year olds every two years over a five-year period, from 1994-95 to 1998-99. The study consists of three waves of interviews of older workers and retirees, collected approximately two years apart: 1994-95, 1996-97, and 1998-99. We selected people to study from random lists of workers and retirees (age 50-72 in1994-95) from six major upstate New York corporations. Participating organizations include one university, two hospitals, two Fortune 500 firms, and a utility company. Our original sample, interviewed in 1994-95, consisted of 762 retirees and not-yet-retired older workers.”

  Previous Back to Statistics Main Page Next  

140 Commonwealth Avenue - McGuinn, 6th Floor - Chestnut Hill, MA 02467
Email: age.work@bc.edu - Phone: 617.552.9195 - Fax: 617.552.9202
produced by ineri