‘Unretirement’ is becoming a hot new trend in the sizzling U.S. labor market

‘Unretirement’ is becoming a hot new trend in the sizzling U.S. labor market


A worker grinds a weld on a safe that is being manufactured at Liberty Safe Company on March 22, 2022 in Payson, Utah.

George Frey | Getty Images

The Covid pandemic sent more than 8 million workers to the sidelines at one point, including many folks who decided it was the right time to retire as the workplace as they knew it faded out of sight.

But with a thriving jobs market in which workers virtually have their pick on where to go, coupled with soaring inflation and the fading of Covid fears, some are finding it a good time to rethink their plans and come back to the fold.

In fact, the level of workers who retired then came back a year later is running around 3.2%, just about where it was before the pandemic, after dipping to around 2% during Covid’s worst days, according to calculations from job placement site Indeed.

“The unretirement trend is emblematic of what we’re seeing in the labor market overall, which is seeing increasing labor force participation for a broad swath of workers,” said Nick Bunker, economic research director for North America at Indeed.

Along with the other factors, Bunker said employers are ramping up incentives to fill 11.5 million job openings. There are about 5.6 million more vacancies than there are available workers, creating a strong power base for those looking for work, no matter the age.

“Employers are taking steps to entice people. There’s an elevated share of postings that mention terms like hiring bonuses, retention bonuses,” Bunker said. “There are signs that employers are starting to lure people in with bonuses like that.”

A much higher cost of living than two years ago also is factoring in.

Prices in March increased 8.5% from a year ago, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and that higher cost of living is posing hardship for people living on fixed incomes.

“For people who were formerly retired and are now returning to work, it certainly is having an impact,” said Bunker, though he added that he is “skeptical it’s the main factor.” He pointed, for instance, to conditions following the financial crisis in 2008 when retirees started coming back even though inflation was nowhere near the level it is now.

For Tommy Benz, a former executive at Verizon Wireless who retired from a position at Endurance International, returning to work was a bit about a desire to stay busy but also about loyalty to his high school alma mater.

Benz, a 54-year-old Mountain Top, Pa., resident, has been taking substitute teaching jobs recently as a way to help out Crestwood High School, which needed classroom help badly. The town is in the northeast part of the state, about 110 miles north of Philadelphia.

“While subbing was not something I aspired to do in retirement, it was always in the back of my mind,” Benz said. “When I learned of the shortage they were facing, it became an easy decision.”

How many more people have come back to work will become a little clearer Friday when the BLS releases its nonfarm payrolls report for April.

The labor force participation rate was 62.4% in March, roughly a full percentage point up from its pre-pandemic level but well off the low of 60.2% in April 2020. The total labor force level, after sinking by more than 8.2 million from February 2020 to April of the same year, is about 200,000 shy of the pre-Covid state.

Economists surveyed by Dow Jones expect that payrolls increased by 400,000 in April and the unemployment rate fell to 3.5%, which would bring it back to its February 2020 level.



Source

Asia-Pacific markets trade subdued as Trump-EU tensions keep investors jittery
World

Asia-Pacific markets trade subdued as Trump-EU tensions keep investors jittery

Atlantide Phototravel | Corbis Documentary | Getty Images Asia-Pacific markets traded subdued as investors weigh renewed U.S. tariff threats tied to Greenland that have stoked concerns of a growing rift between Washington and European nations. European states are reportedly discussing counter-tariffs and broader punitive economic measures in response to fresh tariff threats from President Donald […]

Read More
Dow set to fall more than 300 points on Trump’s new tariff threat over Greenland: Live updates
World

Dow set to fall more than 300 points on Trump’s new tariff threat over Greenland: Live updates

Trades work at the New York Stock Exchange on Jan. 16, 2026. NYSE Stock futures on Monday night pointed to a downbeat session on Wall Street as President Donald Trump intensifies his rhetoric on Greenland, threatening to impose new tariffs on countries opposing the sale of the Danish territory to the U.S. Futures tied to […]

Read More
Fed chief Powell to attend Supreme Court arguments on Trump bid to fire Lisa Cook
World

Fed chief Powell to attend Supreme Court arguments on Trump bid to fire Lisa Cook

Jerome Powell, chairman of the US Federal Reserve, during the Hoover Institution’s George P. Shultz Memorial Lecture Series in Stanford, California, US, on Monday, Dec. 1, 2025. Jason Henry | Bloomberg | Getty Images Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell plans to attend oral arguments on Wednesday at the Supreme Court in a case challenging the […]

Read More