10.02.13
ADP, a leading global provider of Human Capital Management (HCM) solutions, announced the findings of Age and Retirement Benchmarks: Key Analytics that Drive Human Capital Management, a new ADP Research Institute report on age and retirement benchmarks in the U.S. workforce. According to the research, assuming an average retirement age of 61 years, as much as 18% of the U.S. workforce could retire within the next five years. The six industries studied ranged from a low of 9% reaching retirement age in the hospitality industry to a high of 28% in public administration. Other industries included in the study were manufacturing, healthcare, education and retail.
"While there is no guarantee that everyone who reaches the average retirement age will actually stop working, our research indicates several industries could be facing a significant loss of skilled talent over the next five years," said Ahu Yildirmaz, senior director – market Insights at the ADP Research Institute. "Retirement data provides a critical glimpse into the future of a company's workforce. Businesses will want to assess how their own workforces compare to the averages and consider strategies for recruitment and training in order to replace the significant loss of knowledge, experience and company culture that can be expected."
The number of workers reaching retirement age in the next five years varies widely across industries. Public administration and healthcare services can expect large numbers of employees to leave the workforce, given the fact that workers in these industries have average age of 47 and 43 respectively. By contrast the average age for hospitality workers is 34 and for retail 36.
"Benchmarks achieved through in-depth research give HCM professionals a new ability to tap the full talent pool and manage their most valuable asset – people," according to Don Weinstein, senior vice president of product management at ADP. "The power of ‘big data’ is a growing force in driving strategic business decisions."
The analysis in this report is based on aggregated, anonymous, real-world data from approximately 52,000 U.S.-based organizations comprised of about 16 million active workers. The data is from the fourth quarter of 2012.
"While there is no guarantee that everyone who reaches the average retirement age will actually stop working, our research indicates several industries could be facing a significant loss of skilled talent over the next five years," said Ahu Yildirmaz, senior director – market Insights at the ADP Research Institute. "Retirement data provides a critical glimpse into the future of a company's workforce. Businesses will want to assess how their own workforces compare to the averages and consider strategies for recruitment and training in order to replace the significant loss of knowledge, experience and company culture that can be expected."
The number of workers reaching retirement age in the next five years varies widely across industries. Public administration and healthcare services can expect large numbers of employees to leave the workforce, given the fact that workers in these industries have average age of 47 and 43 respectively. By contrast the average age for hospitality workers is 34 and for retail 36.
"Benchmarks achieved through in-depth research give HCM professionals a new ability to tap the full talent pool and manage their most valuable asset – people," according to Don Weinstein, senior vice president of product management at ADP. "The power of ‘big data’ is a growing force in driving strategic business decisions."
The analysis in this report is based on aggregated, anonymous, real-world data from approximately 52,000 U.S.-based organizations comprised of about 16 million active workers. The data is from the fourth quarter of 2012.