The Graying of MA Research Report Cover

The Graying of Massachusetts: Aging, the New Rules of Retirement, and the Changing Workforce


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Many Massachusetts workers will face a stark choice in the coming years: Retire later or retire with less money. Our findings show that powerful trends are converging at once to alter the retirement landscape: An aging population that has not saved enough must adjust to new Social Security rules that delay full benefits from the current age of 65 to 67 years. In addition, about one-third of full-time Bay State workers lack any form of pension coverage - including 401(k) plans - at their current workplace, and personal savings rates are at their lowest since the Great Depression.

These changes are occurring as many of the state's 1.87 million Baby Boomers are getting ready to retire over the next five years. The shift to an older population has huge implications for the Massachusetts labor market, as the number of younger workers declines over the next two decades. Older workers may offer a way to stem the impending labor shortages, but a number of challenges must be overcome in order to capitalize on this mutual interest.

MassINC's unique Civic Sense program is geared toward a new generation of leaders. Through lively lectures, panel discussions, and after-work cocktail receptions, Civic Sense offers a forum for civic-minded citizens in their 20s and 30s to meet each other and learn about key public policy issues.

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The American Dream Project is a multi-dimensional initiative that includes the MassINC Middle Class Index, long-form journalism in a special fall issue of CommonWealth magazine, and a major forthcoming research report prepared jointly with the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University. Learn More »

Criss-crossing Massachusetts, these 11 historic cities are "Gateways" to the state and regional economies, "Gateways" to the middle class for generations of families, and "Gateways" to the educational, cultural, and other major institutions that make the Commonwealth vibrant and successful.

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