tuscl

OT: Over the Hill at Work: Why 50 May Be the New 70

Papi_Chulo
Miami, FL (or the nearest big-booty club)
Too old for the job and time to make room for the younger generation? Jack Ma thinks so.
He's the CEO of Alibaba Group, the e-commerce conglomerate who said Tuesday he's stepping down from his post in May.

Jack Ma is not even a baby boomer. He's 48 years old. But he says he's feeling the strain of his job. "When I was 35, I was so energetic and fresh-thinking, I had nothing to worry about," Ma said in an interview.
In an email to employees, Ma said: "It's because I see that Alibaba's young people have better, more brilliant, dreams than mine, and they are more capable of building a future that belongs to them." (Read more: Why Women Don't Save for Retirement)

So this begs some questions: Are careers over much sooner these days than in the past? Is the younger generation—- Gen X—taking over? Or is it the even-younger Gen Y?

"Almost without fail, people in the 45-55 age range get to a place where they go through a professional midlife crisis," said Sharon Hulce, president and CEO of Employment Resource Group, a search firm.
"They say 'I've made money and done well and is this all there is?' They know that once they get to older age they are less marketable so they make a move," Hulce said, who is writing a book about career transitions.
There could be many more execs joining Ma in his 'retirement.' A survey of executives in June of last year by search firm ExecuNet stated that many executives were just waiting for the economy to get better so they could retire. They cited stress as one of the main reasons for wanting to leave.

"More and more, professionals are feeling burnt out and discouraged, and are in turn leaving the workforce because they can't find any level of alignment between work and life," says Allison O'Kelly, founder and CEO of staffing firm Mom Corps.

"High level professionals are finding that their careers are too demanding and as a result they are choosing family and personal life over career to find relief," O'Kelly said.
As for generation Y or X or even Z, Hulce says they may be some draw backs to them taking over the reigns. (Read more: 7 Retirement Planning Myths)

"There mind set is different. They've seen their parents struggle and they figure what's the point of staying at a company for a long time," Hulce said. "They are more focused on personal flexibility and having their wants met. They may have great ideas but they won't be there long. This is a trend that's going to keep happening."
And for those who aren't in the executive suite? Many don't have the luxury of becoming a Jack Ma as they are forced to keep working into the golden years whether they want to or not, because of layoffs and a struggling job market.

"The recent economy has choked the job flow and employees as well as all business owners in their 50s and 60s are getting chewed up and spit out without job security that they once had," said relationship expert and author April Masini.

Of course, Ma's not completely retiring. He will stay on in the less stressful position of chairman of the firm. He's also said to be worth $3.4 billion, so he can make this type of move without dipping into his retirement fund.

Which makes retiring or a career change easier for some --- and difficult for others.
"Jack Ma is not a good example of people wanting to retire earlier," said Randy Strauss, Managing Partner of Strauss Group Inc a placement agency. "He's very wealthy. I'd retire also if I were in his shoes."

http://www.cnbc.com/id/100381106

12 comments

  • Tiredtraveler
    12 years ago
    Why continue to work hard when the government is just going to steal it.
    Fuck em, Retire and move to a lower tax bracket.
  • Dougster
    12 years ago
    Is this why tittyfuck has been unemployed as long as he has? That and he is a dipshit plain and simple?
  • shadowcat
    12 years ago
    I had a stripper put it the other way around as far as customers go. "70 is the new 50".
  • deogol
    12 years ago
    US Federal debt is 100% of GDP (not including state and local and individual.) And that is the debt computed to the slack side. I think we are in for a hell of a ride. Get your guns and your seeds while you can. When there was talk about minting a trillion dollar coin, I knew we had entered a new age... and not a good one.
  • looneylarry
    12 years ago
    "So this begs some questions: Are careers over much sooner these days than in the past?"

    Yes.
  • pabloantonio
    12 years ago
    If "50 is the new 70" then Shadowcat has 20 more years of fucking dancers.
  • Alucard
    12 years ago
    This CEO is probably retiring because his Board of Directors is making available financially at any point he wishes.

    Normal people usually DON'T have the same option.
  • deogol
    12 years ago
    There are plenty of people retiring these days because of no work... just without the money!
  • SuperDude
    12 years ago
    I was 67 on Jan. 10, 2013. Dancers love trying to take my pension money. I'm old enough to deflect.
  • Ermita_Nights
    12 years ago
    I've retired twice now, and I'm still working full time. If I stop I won't have money for the club.
  • latinalover69
    12 years ago
    Am on TUSCL? What the fuck is this bullshit? I just spent 2 hours on infowars.com and drudge reading how Barry Sotero and Biden and Bloomberg and Rahm Emmanuel and Cuomo are coming after our motherfucking guns. I come here to read about banging whores in stripclubs and I get this shit. Godamn you Papi Chulo! :-)
  • farmerart
    12 years ago
    I retired once. I hated it. I will never do it again. As soon as the 'no compete' clause of the contract selling my first company expired I got back in business. If my health remains good I should have another 10-15 years at my game in the oil patch.

    I don't expect that I can last that long in SCs! I am not shadowcat #2.
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