Datuk Norma said of the 518 Malaysians who had responded to the survey, almost all had indicated that they would like to live to at least 80 years, yet many are not self-assured financially about having a comfortable life throughout their retirement years. She said only slightly half of those surveyed were confident of having a comfortable life while the rest were not very optimistic. Professionals were found to be more certain of having a comfortable post-retirement life compared to their non-professional peers.
According to the same report, 70 percent of those surveyed said they would expect to live between six to 20 years more after attaining the age of sixty and will continue working as long as their mental and physical capabilities permit. They also felt that there should not be mandatory retirement, as it was seen as one of the most efficient methods for many individuals to finance the increased number of years in retirement.
“In preparation for post-retirement, respondents indicated their plan to boost their savings by reducing current expenses and reduce their cost of living in retirement. “A quarter of those surveyed had intended to move to cheaper location, while others would turn to family members for assistance or consider living in assisted living facility such as a retirement village, while a good number of respondents said they would turn to government for old age support,” she said.
Datuk Norma also pointed out that currently only 80 percent of the total 13.5 million employed labour force in Malaysia had some form of retirement savings and government pensions although government pensions were not contributory.
She said as a preparation for the increase in the number of ageing workforce, organisations had to think now about how they would deal with that change in a way that was appropriate for the industries they were in and the workers they employed.
According to her, workers too had to be willing to continually upgrade their skills and undergo retraining.
She also revealed that the Centre was working on a blueprint for ageing and how to prepare for it in Malaysia.
“Post retirement jobs may entail a different nature of job, which one may even find interesting. On the issue of employing people post-retirement, these are labour matters,” she added.
She pointed out that since financial issue is an important reason for retirees to return to the labour market, employers should consider offering ?bridge jobs? either full or part-time as an extension of current work that would help ease worker’s transition into retirement.
Citing Singapore as an example, she said its Special Employment Credit (SEC), which was introduced in 2011 to support employers and to raise the employability of older Singaporean workers and persons with disability, provided wage-offset to employers hiring Singaporean workers aged 55 and above until the re-employment age ceiling of 67.
In Australia, she said the Wage Subsidies for Matured Age Job Seekers (RESTART) employers can receive up to $10,000 depending on eligibility for a full time employee while in Japan, its government provides subsidy programs under the ?Law for Employment Stabilization for Older People? to employers who either continue employment of existing older workers or who hire older persons.
— BERNAMA