1 / 22

The Aging U.S. Workforce:

The Aging U.S. Workforce:. Trends and Challenges June 1, 2008 2008 IAJVS Annual Conference, Boston MA. The U.S. Population is Aging. As America Ages, So Does the U.S. Workforce. 78 million Baby Boomers (born 1946-1964) Boomers comprise 46% of the U.S. workforce.

adelio
Download Presentation

The Aging U.S. Workforce:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Aging U.S. Workforce: Trends and Challenges June 1, 2008 2008 IAJVS Annual Conference, Boston MA

  2. The U.S. Population is Aging

  3. As America Ages,So Does the U.S. Workforce • 78 million Baby Boomers(born 1946-1964) • Boomers comprise 46% of the U.S. workforce Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics

  4. Change in U.S. Population, 1950-1960 by Age Group

  5. Change in U.S. Population, 1960-1970 by Age Group

  6. Change in U.S. Population, 1970-1980 by Age Group

  7. Change in U.S. Population, 1980-1990 by Age Group

  8. Change in U.S. Population, 1990-2000 by Age Group

  9. Projected Change in U.S. Population,2000-2010 by Age Group Source: U.S. Census Bureau

  10. Projected Change in U.S. Population,2010-2020 by Age Group Source: U.S. Census Bureau

  11. Oldest Boomers are Turning 60 this Year • In 2008, the oldest boomers will be able to get Social Security; in 2011, they will begin to turn 65 “The social and economicimplications of an aging population– and of the baby boom in particular– are likely to be profound for both individuals and society” Louis Kincannon, Census Bureau Director

  12. Labor and Talent Shortages and Related Challenges are Predicted in Certain Industries and Occupations

  13. Examples of Critical Workforce Shortages and Challenges Affecting the NonProfit Community • Social Work Workforce: 62% of social workers are over 45 years of age as compared with 37% of the civilian labor force, and 29% of social workers are 55 years and older as compared with 14% of the civilian labor force. Major workforce challenges include replacing the large number ready to retire; recruiting new social workers; and retaining the current workforce in an increasingly stressful environment (National Association of Social Workers/Center for Workforce Studies) • Behavioral Healthcare Workforce: Workforce problems are evident in every element and dimension of the behavioral health field – from projected shortfalls in skilled behavioral health professionals to difficulties in recruiting and retaining staff to a vacuum of future leaders (The National Action Plan on Behavioral Health Workforce Development/The Annapolis Coalition) • Direct Care Workforce:A shortage of direct-care workers in long-term care - workers who provide care and support to persons with chronic diseases or disabilities is predicted to worsen as the baby boomers begin to retire and the number of people needing long-term care grows. Personal and Home Care Aides rank as the 8th fastest growing occupation from 2000-2010. (Institute for the Future of Aging Services; US Bureau of Labor Statistics)

  14. There will be fewer younger workers • Generation X, which follows the Boomers, is a smaller group – 26% of the workforce, according to the Census Bureau • Younger generations (X and Y) have different attitudes about careers and job satisfaction

  15. Many U.S. Employers Face Broad Workforce and Human Resource Challenges “Responding to the personnel tornado on the horizon”-Stateline.org • Acute worker shortages in critical jobs, programs, and agencies • Anticipated “brain drain” and loss of institutional memory • Difficulty in recruiting skilled replacements • Lack of resources to replace talent gaps • Lack of flexible workplace options • Managing a multi-age workplace

  16. Challenges for Non Profits • Projected Large Scale Executive Turnover ~ Three out of four executive directors plan to leave their jobs by 2011 (Ready to Lead? Next Generation Leaders Speak Out) • Competition for Workers in Other (Aging) Industries who offer better pay and benefits ~ Projected labor shortages in federal and state government with nearly one half of federal and state employees eligible to retire at age 55 in 2008. • Uncertain workforce pipeline that is willing and prepared to work in, and/or lead, nonprofit organizations. Nearly half of young nonprofit professionals responding to a survey say they plan to leave the non profit sector (Stepping Up or Stepping Out: A Report on the Readiness of Next Generation NonProfit Leaders/Young Nonprofit Professionals Network)

  17. How are Employers Across the Country Responding? • Businesses with shortages (real or predicted) are setting in motion strategies to retain older workers, groom and develop existing workers (talent management), or look at ways to recruit new workers • Businesses with no perceived labor/talent shortages • Business as usual • Businesses with no clue – no idea, no plans

  18. What Actions are Employers Taking? Expand Their Recruitment Efforts To cope with potential labor shortages, employers are expanding their efforts to recruit and reach: • Youth • Women • Laid-off workers • Older workers • Welfare recipients • Veterans • Persons with disabilities • Ex-offenders

  19. What Actions Are Employers Taking? Increased Emphasis on Retention • In the SHRM 2004-2005 Workplace Forecast, retention issues did not appear on HR professionals list of top 10 concerns. In 2006, an emphasis on developing retention strategies for current and future workers was the employment trend rated “most likely to have a major impact on the workplace.” This includes: • Retaining baby boomers • Retaining those likely to replace them

  20. What Actions Are Employers Taking? Succession Plans and Flexible Workplaces • 74% of employers said they have already or plan to develop succession plans and replacement charts • 62% plan to provide flexible scheduling (job-sharing, tele-work, etc.) • 50% of employers said they plan to provide opportunities for workers to transfer to jobs with reduced pay and responsibilities • 49% plan to create or redesign positions that allow near-retirees to ease into retirement (phased retirement, bridge employment) (Source: SHRM Workplace Forecast 2006)

  21. What Actions Are Employers Taking? Increased Emphasis on Training and Development • 83% of employers surveyed by SHRM said they plan to invest more in training and development to boost skill levels of current employees, including both training in basic skills and specialized skills • 84% of employers said they plan to provide continuous skills training for incumbent workers (to update workers’ skills and keep workers ahead of the curve) • 71% of employers surveyed said they plan to make greater investments and make more use of e-learning • 44% of employers surveyed said they plan to increase their involvement in local, state and national workforce readiness and development initiatives (Source: SHRM Workplace Forecast 2006)

  22. www.heldrich.rutgers.edu

More Related