Published:
The Dark Side of the Retirement Bubble
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 10 /PRNewswire/ -- Is another perfect storm looming on
the economic horizon once we sort through the current Wall Street banking
crisis -- and will President-elect Barack Obama's administration be prepared
to deal with it?
Management consultant Stephen Xavier, founder of Cornerstone Executive
Development Group (http://www.cornerstone-edg.com), argues that key industries
have not addressed the loss of critical knowledge that will hit them when a
huge number of baby boomers head for retirement by 2010. "In fact," says
Xavier, "although the retirement crisis is already well underway, our current
economic crisis has bought management a few crucial years or so by the fact
that many boomers put off retirement when they saw recent and dramatic plunges
in their 401(k) and related retirement accounts. But many companies face huge
losses if this looming shortage of skilled labor and management is not
addressed now."
What industries are affected and why are we unprepared? Xavier cites
ongoing studies by organizations such as the AARP, formerly the American
Association of Retired Persons, and the Society for Human Resource Management
(SHRM), among others, that have been sounding warning bells for the last ten
years.
In 2005, SHRM President Susan R. Meisinger warned that these demographics
present major challenges to America's workplaces, saying, "These are serious
HR and workforce issues that could undermine the nation's global
competitiveness and HR must determine how to meet these challenges." At the
same time, SHRM's own studies showed that only a quarter of HR professionals
were convinced that the flood of retiring baby boomers would be a problem for
their organization. "Not so," says Xavier, "the crisis is upon us now and far
more serious than many in business realize."
This lack of concern by HR professionals elicited a warning this fall from
AARP's Chief People Officer Ellie Hollander, who said that few employers
recognized the effect of the brain drain they will suffer when boomers retire
and take all their knowledge and experience with them. Studies in the
aerospace industry and manufacturing sectors, two areas likely to be hard hit,
back up this concern.
According to Xavier, the current economic crisis may have bought companies
a few years time to put plans in place. He cited one energy company that has
seen a withdrawal of requests for retirement among many in management as their
portfolios shrank dramatically this year. But this company and others are no
longer waiting for their HR departments to take the lead, but are bringing in
outside experts to set up programs on bench strength and succession. "More
organizations need to take action now," Xavier concluded.
For more information, contact: Cindy Rakowitz -- (818) 783-3307 or Jan
Andrew -- (212) 989-3646
This release was issued through eReleases(TM). For more information,
visit http://www.ereleases.com.
SOURCE Cornerstone Executive Development Group
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Copyright © 2009, NewsBlaze,
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