"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2023-01-26T15:35:27Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2023/01/26/united-airlines-intv-ceo-es-romans-vpx.cnn"
data-branding-key=""
data-video-slug="united airlines intv ceo es romans vpx"
data-first-publish-slug="united airlines intv ceo es romans vpx"
data-video-tags="air transportation,airlines,aviation and aerospace industry,business and industry sectors,business, economy and trade,christine romans,companies,iab-air travel,iab-aviation industry,iab-business and finance,iab-industries,iab-travel,iab-travel type,misc people,transportation and warehousing,united airlines"
data-details="">
Video Ad Feedback
'The system is stressed to the max': United CEO weighs in on industry woes
"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2023-01-20T11:06:04Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2023/01/19/nightcap-work-from-home-employers-clip-orig-nb.cnn"
data-branding-key="nightcap"
data-video-slug="nightcap work from home employers clip orig nb"
data-first-publish-slug="nightcap work from home employers clip orig nb"
data-video-tags=""
data-details="">
Video Ad Feedback
Disney just threw down the gauntlet in the WFH battle
"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2023-01-17T14:04:51Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2023/01/17/nyc-sober-bar-owner-cnntm-cprog-vpx.cnn"
data-branding-key=""
data-video-slug="nyc sober bar owner cnntm cprog vpx"
data-first-publish-slug="nyc sober bar owner cnntm cprog vpx"
data-video-tags="bars, pubs and taverns,brand safety-nsf alcohol,brand safety-nsf sensitive,business and industry sectors,business, economy and trade,continents and regions,food and beverage industry,food and drink,iab-attractions,iab-bars & restaurants,iab-business and finance,iab-dining out,iab-food & drink,iab-food industry,iab-industries,new york (state),new york city,north america,northeastern united states,restaurant and food service industry,restaurant industry,restaurants,the americas,united states"
data-details="">
Video Ad Feedback
Hear why this bar owner decided to open a non-alcoholic bar
"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2023-01-13T12:33:08Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2023/01/13/inflation-ease-small-business-impact-cohen-pkg-cnntm-vpx.cnn"
data-branding-key=""
data-video-slug="inflation ease small business impact cohen pkg cnntm vpx"
data-first-publish-slug="inflation ease small business impact cohen pkg cnntm vpx"
data-video-tags="business, economy and trade,company activities and management,company structure and ownership,domestic alerts,domestic-business,economic conditions,economic indicators,economy and economic indicators,iab-business,iab-business and finance,iab-economy,iab-small and medium-sized business,inflation,international alerts,international-business,small business"
data-details="">
Video Ad Feedback
'You're just a hamster spinning on a wheel': Restaurant owner struggles to stay open
"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2022-12-15T13:26:19Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2022/12/15/labor-force-men-women-yurkevich-dnt-contd-cnntm-vpx.cnnbusiness"
data-branding-key=""
data-video-slug="labor force men women yurkevich dnt contd cnntm vpx"
data-first-publish-slug="labor force men women yurkevich dnt contd cnntm vpx"
data-video-tags=""
data-details="">
"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2022-11-29T14:05:24Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2022/11/29/bank-of-america-ceo-brian-moynihan-economy-harlow-cnntm-vpx.cnnbusiness"
data-branding-key="perspectives-no-logo"
data-video-slug="bank of america ceo brian moynihan economy harlow cnntm vpx"
data-first-publish-slug="bank of america ceo brian moynihan economy harlow cnntm vpx"
data-video-tags="bank of america corp,brian moynihan,business figures,business, economy and trade,companies,economy and economic indicators,misc people,poppy harlow"
data-details="">
Video Ad Feedback
Bank of America CEO predicts 'mild recession' next year
"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2022-11-18T22:44:24Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2022/11/18/rising-heat-costs-home-heating-oil-prices-inflation-winter-cohen-pkg-biz-lead-vpx.cnn"
data-branding-key=""
data-video-slug="rising heat costs home heating oil prices inflation winter cohen pkg biz lead vpx"
data-first-publish-slug="rising heat costs home heating oil prices inflation winter cohen pkg biz lead vpx"
data-video-tags="business and industry sectors,business, economy and trade,economic conditions,economic indicators,economy and economic indicators,electric power industry,energy and utilities,inflation,seasons of the year,utilities industry,winter (season)"
data-details="">
Video Ad Feedback
Some Americans being forced to pick between paying for groceries and heating their homes
"
data-check-event-based-preview=""
data-is-vertical-video-embed="false"
data-network-id=""
data-publish-date="2022-11-09T19:49:31Z"
data-video-section="business"
data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2022/11/09/stew-leonard-jr-grocery-food-price-mb-markets-now.cnn-business"
data-branding-key="markets-now"
data-video-slug="stew leonard jr grocery food price mb markets now"
data-first-publish-slug="stew leonard jr grocery food price mb markets now"
data-video-tags="agricultural commodities,agriculture,agriculture, forestry, and commercial fishing,banking, finance and investments,business and industry sectors,business, economy and trade,commodity markets,economic conditions,economic indicators,economy and economic indicators,financial markets and investing,food and beverage industry,food prices,food production industry,holidays and observances,inflation,retail and wholesale trade,supermarkets and groceries"
data-details="">
Video Ad Feedback
Grocery chain CEO on food prices: 'My crystal ball is broken'
One of the more insidious myths this year was that young people didn’t want to work because they were getting by just fine on government aid. People had too much money, went the narrative.
Only trouble is, the numbers don’t back it up.
Instead, early retirement — whether forced by the pandemic or made possible otherwise — is playing a big role in America’s evolving labor market.
People have left the workforce for myriad reasons in the past two years — layoffs, health insecurity, child care needs, and any number of personal issues that arose from the disruption caused by the pandemic. But among those who have left and are not able to — or don’t want to — return,the vast majority are older Americans who accelerated their retirement.
Earlier this month, ADP Chief Economist Nela Richardson said the strong stock market along with soaring home prices “has given some higher income people options. We already saw a large portion of the Boomer workforce retiring. And they’re in a better position now.”
In assessing the jobs recovery, economists have pointed out that while the unemployment rate has come down, the labor force participation rate hasn’t improved at the same pace. But Jared Bernstein, a member of President Joe Biden’s Council of Economic Advisers, said that once “non-prime age” workers — those over 55 — are excluded from the metrics a much clearer picture of how the labor recovery is doing emerges because it strips out the retirement narrative.
Last month, there were 3.6 million more Americans who had left the labor force and said they didn’t want a job compared with November 2019, says Aaron Sojourner, a labor economist and professor at the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management.
Older Americans, age 55 and up, accounted for whopping 90% of that increase.
“I think a lot of the narratives imagine prime-age workers as being missing, but it actually skews much older,” Sojourner told CNN Business.
The labor shortage and retirement
The oft-lamented labor shortage has become a shorthand for the complicated reality of thepandemic-era labor force.
Americans are quitting their jobs in record numbers — more than 4 million each month since July — but much of that quitting is happening among young people who are leaving for otherjobs or better pay. They’re not leaving the workforce entirely.
“Part of it is a job quality shortage,” says Sojourner. “It’s a bit of a puzzle why employers aren’t raising wages and improving working conditions fast enough to draw people back in. They say they want to hire people — there are 11 million job openings — but they’re not creating job openings that people want.”
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell underscored that issue during a news conference on Wednesday.
“There’s a demographic trend underlying all of this… The question of how much we can get back is a good one, and what we can do is try to create the conditions,” that allow people to come back, he said.
To be sure, some companies have been raising wages to attract and retain staff. Some businesses also offer signing bonuses to get workers in the door. But economists aren’t sure whether these incentives are here to stay and willimprove conditions for workers in the long term.
“I can want a 65-inch TV for $50, but it doesn’t mean there’s a TV shortage, it means I’m not willing to pay enough to get somebody to sell me a TV,” said Sojourner.
Nearly 70% of the 5 million people who left the labor force during the pandemic are older than55, according to researchers from Goldman Sachs, and many of them aren’t looking to return.
Retirements tend to be “stickier” than other labor force exits, the researchers wrote. Even so,they expect that an improving virus situation and increased vaccination will allow older workers to return to the labor force.
In normal times, retired people are often drawn back into the workforce. But the “unretirement” rate fell significantly during the pandemic, exacerbating the shortage of workers, according to research from the Kansas City Fed.
There are some early signs that seniors are coming back to the workforce as vaccination rates increase and employers offer higher wages. The unretirement rate fell to just over 2% early in the pandemic, but in recent months has ticked up to around 2.6%, according to Nick Bunker, an economist at Indeed. That’s still off from the pre-pandemic rate of around 3%.
Then again, older workers are potentially competing with younger, more qualified applicants for jobs, which could make their return more challenging.