Empirical Research The Institutional Challenges of Full-time Faculty Retirement: Has The Expedition Accomplished All That it Promised and That it Should Accomplish?
By Jeffery D. Senese
Aug 14, 2008 - 10:18:58 AM
Introduction
The retirement of
full-time faculty is an issue that is currently and likely to continue to
challenge many higher education institutions.
It is an issue that has implications that are long-term and both
positive and negative. On the positive
side for institutions, faculty retirements present potential opportunities to
renew the core staffing of the institution.
Faculty retirements may allow institutions to add new energy and
innovation through the hiring of new faculty.
Not that new ideas or innovations are the exclusive realm of new or
young, but fresh ideas and approaches in higher education are more typically
associated with new faculty coming to an institution for the first time rather
than with senior faculty near the end of their careers. To be sure there are clearly exceptions to
this phenomenon and perhaps perception and in the sphere of research that may
particularly be the case as senior faculty are proportionately more productive
researchers. Retirements are also
opportunities to reallocate scarce faculty salary resources to areas where student
demand is particularly acute.
In recording his travels through Europe and the Middle-east Mark Twain concluded with a recounting
of his experiences wherein he satirically discusses his travel mates and
focuses on his own views and opinions while not having the kindest words for his
fellow travelers and the crew of the
Quaker City, which was the ship on
which he traveled. Faculty retiring have
a similar luxury or opportunity in that they can continue to engage in the
community but are fully empowered to criticize the end of their journey as well
as decide when and where they will leave the voyage without concern or second
thoughts about the ship and crew that conveyed them to that point in their careers. Thankfully not many faculty are as mocking as
Twain. On the contrary it has been my
experience that most retiring faculty are concerned about their transition and
think about the ship, crew and passengers (e.g., students) of the institution
they are about to leave. This paper is
focused on providing a discussion of faculty retirements with particular context
of the institutional impacts and to focus administrative considerations.
Institutions of higher education are
currently enjoying strong student growth both in terms of traditional and
non-traditional students. This growth
has created a demand for resources and particularly faculty staffing. While part-time faculty use has dramatically
increased many in academe believe there is a certain critical mass of full time
faculty that is needed to deliver high quality academic programs. In that context, retirements are perhaps the
most readily available and cost efficient source of faculty position dollars
and this is likely to continue in the next decade given the average age of the
professoriate at this writing and the limited availability of truly new dollars
provided to institutions for that purpose.
Few institutions of higher education have initiated programs to increase
the number of faculty at their institutions other than when they begin new
curricula.
[1] Even in that case the proportion of adjunct
faculty, of the faculty as a whole, has growth steadily over the past few decades
and there is nothing on the horizon that seems capable of abating or slowing
that trend.
Faculty retirements also have the
potential to create the opportunity for institutions to diversify their faculty. The faculty that are currently retiring are
arguably more white and male than the demographics of the country and the
broader higher education access successes over the past few decades strongly
encourages the development of a level of diversity among the faculty and staff
of institutions of higher education to strengthen their collegiality, openness
and ability to understand the cultures and subcultures both within the United
States and globally. While changing the
demographic profile of the faculty will not “solve” the diversity issue, it can
move institutions in this direction more expeditiously.
On the other hand, institutions,
through faculty retirements, one can argue, lose something in each retirement
as long-serving faculty have an ability unlike new untried faculty to balance
their teaching, research and service responsibilities. Senior faculty also have perhaps a better
ability to contribute in ways that newer less experienced faculty are far from
able to bring to bear at the beginning of their careers because the former know
the institution and their roles. It is
important that academic administrators should not immediately see retirement as
a positive for their institution, and certainly most experienced administrators
know this or come to appreciate it when a strong senior faculty member
retires. This is especially true when
the individuals retiring have made wonderful contributions to the institution,
are engaged appropriately or otherwise continue to add value to the learning
community. Serious health concerns and
the effects of aging aside, it is commonsensical to suggest that senior faculty
can add much to their institution and perhaps it should be considered whether
partnering with them to create what might be labeled “legacy programs” rather
than simple emeritus benefits, early retirement incentives or voluntary
separation agreements or other like legalistic or managerial approaches. In such legacy programs, institutions could
design an approach perhaps to transfer experience and knowledge wherein the
senior faculty would “leave behind” their successes in teaching, research and
learning as well as scholarship so that it is accessible to junior faculty and
those who will joint the collegium as they retire.
Perhaps it is a bit heretical for
an administrator to suggest that senior faculty should be depended upon to
transfer their knowledge and that one should look to many of these individuals
as valuable human resources who have a true desire to do what is good for the
institution and higher education. One
can also argue that much will be lost when the “baby boomer” generation of
faculty retires if a more engaged approach in the lead up to their retirements
is not taken. The costs for engaging in
knowledge transfer of senior faculty are minimal. They are faculty and allowing for a longer
phasing out and perhaps phasing-in of long-serving adjuncts might be a
solution, albeit an approach which requires a great deal of finesse, to the
problem of retirement of faculty.
The argument that senior faculty
should be celebrated and worked-with to contribute to building their
institutions as they retire is unorthodox because there is a bias against older
faculty in the United States. As long ago as 1905 William Osler the
outgoing chief physician at the John
Hopkins Medical
School argued that
faculty over 40 were unproductive and those over 60 are a nuisance (Graebner,
1980). This view may not have changed
very much in the past one hundred years although it certainly will not be heard
in such direct terms in the litigious era we are in at present.
Due to rapid faculty growth in
the 1960’s and the subsequent slow down in hiring in the 1980’s a “bulge” in
the faculty age cohort exists (Ashenfelter and Card, 2002). Those who have identified this trend have
argued that institutions must work now to replace senior faculty with other perhaps
younger faculty who expect equal salary to those who retire given salary
compression and market forces. All of
higher education is competing for new faculty at a time when student enrollments
are at an all-time high. So the new
faculty, while promising and perhaps full of energy, also must develop their
research agendas and records at the same time they are engaging in the learning
community, focusing on curriculum development, service to the institution and development
of more active learning approaches given the changes in students and their learning
styles. Indeed the “new” faculty will
need to evolve in ways that senior faculty have not had to in their careers, and
also in ways that they have not contemplated or that perhaps cannot be foreseen
at this point given they will have careers that will likely extend into the
middle of the twenty-first century.
In a recent TIAA-CREF Institute
study it was found that relative to all working Americans, faculty are doing a
good job of preparing for retirement (Yakoboski, 2005) (See Figure 1). That certainly bodes well for institutions of
higher education because it suggests there will be a predictable retirement
pattern among faculty. On the other hand
it may also suggest that faculty can choose their retirement time more readily
regardless of the needs of the institution given they have been more adept at
planning for that time throughout their careers. If one assumes that financial concerns are
well in hand, it may only be health issues that drive the faculty retirement
decision at least from the faculty perspective.
This may be an oversimplification, but if it is either true or a large
part of the truth it may make managing retirement incentives not about buy-outs
or financial encouragement so much as it is about individual faculty health and
perhaps the institution providing health care support.
[1] The
notable recent exception of Boston
University who announced
that it would be hiring 150 new faculty (Chronicle of Higher Education,
November 2, 2007).
Adapted from Yakoboski, P. (2005). Trends and Issues:
Findings from the Retirement Confidence Survey of College and University
Faculty, TIAA-CREF Institute, www.tiaa-crefinstitute.org.
Trends. The generational changes in the United States
are fairly well known at this point. In
particular the so-called “baby boomers” are a large group that is beginning to
retire in many occupations including faculty.
The baby boomers and seniors are currently estimated to include
78,000,000 and that group is growing at a rate of one every 8 seconds
representing a vital and influential force in the United States (Christian Science
Monitor, 2006, p. 18). In that group
there has been a change in the trend of men towards a slightly later age of
retirement (Toossi, 2004) although their average age of retirement is still
much younger than that of faculty (Sugar et al., 2005).
Institutions of higher education
should recognize that they are not isolated from the demographic age trends in
society. In fact, the aging of the
professoriate may be the most important trend in higher education today (Sugar
et al., 2005, p. 407) yet very limited data is available on this phenomenon. Many institutions also find it difficult to
plan for faculty retirements and while a good number have taken actions to
encourage it, they have not planned for large numbers of faculty retiring nor
have they really been able to consider how they will strategically renew their
faculty ranks over the coming decade.
All indications are that in the
coming decade, large numbers of professors will be aging into retirement (Clark and d’Ambrosio, 2005). Clark and d’Ambrosio (2005) contend that this
is due to the reality that a relatively large number of new professors were
hired in the 1960s and 1970s and that only a small fraction of these professors
have left the academic labor market at this point in time. Many institutions of higher education are not
adequately planning for this change because it may be difficult to do so or
because they are not even aware of the potential affects of this will have on
their faculty and curriculum.
Institutions with heavily tenured
faculty and those that built the bulk of their faculty compliment in the 1960’s
and 1970’s are going to be particularly affected by this trend. This also implies that competition for new
faculty may increase for all institutions.
This can be seen in some fields today (e.g., business, engineering,
etc.) but if larger numbers retire it may create broader inter-institutional
competition for what might be fewer available qualified new faculty. On the other had there appears to be more
opportunities today for doctorate-level education than was the case in the
1960s and 1970s so there may be hope that the supply of qualified and
credentialed faculty may not be an issue.
There is limited research on the replacement rate of credentialed
faculty so this may be wishful thinking given the growth in the size of the
student body.
Mandatory Faculty Retirement. The current reality of faculty retirement can
be traced to the changes in law enacted over the past thirty years. The first landmark was the 1967 Federal Age
Discrimination in Employment Act that created the legal idea of the protection
of individuals from age discrimination in hiring, discharge, compensation and
other aspects of employment. Despite the
existence of the Federal Age Discrimination Employment Act, mandatory
retirement had become nearly a universal event in the lives of faculty in colleges
and universities during the 1970s (Aschenfelter and Card, 2002). In 1994, however, age-based mandatory
retirement ended nationally for tenured professors in American colleges and
universities, and a new era began in which academics could continue to work
indefinitely in their career jobs if they wished (Dorfman, 2002, p. 15). There was a view expressed at that time that
faculty would remain in their positions into their 70s and beyond and that that
would weaken higher education. It is interesting
that the perception concerning senior faculty was so negative at that
time. In the context of the law and its
rather significant shift from the past that reaction might have been a
rational. Conversely, it has been
argued, that society cannot afford to support on pensions people who have
received long and expensive training and who still, in what is now late middle
age, are quite capable of continuing to exercise their skills (Tizard, 2004).
Institutions should also consider
the amount of energy and resources they have dedicated to senior faculty over
their careers and in the end this investment is likely to have been significant. Where senior faculty remain vibrant
contributors to the institution, they should be supported to continue as long
as possible given these investments alone but also because such an approach
does not lack integrity for both the institution and individual faculty.
Faculty Effectiveness. There is also research that contradicts the
point of view that senior faculty become less capable by definition. Research has shown that faculty who remain in
their positions rather than retire are generally productive and continue to
enjoy their work in the senior years of their careers (Dorfman, 2002; Over,
1989). This certainly implies that it
would be reasonable to design an approach that can take particular advantage of
capitalizing on the lengthy careers of senior faculty to add value to the
institution by creating a situation wherein they will “pass on” their knowledge
and experiences to the next generation of faculty and to the institution. Senior faculty who are at the ends of their careers
are an incredible knowledge resource that higher education has intermittently
and somewhat poorly drawn on to create an institutional memory. Sugar et al., 2005 suggest that senior
faculty with established careers and a wealth of teaching experience may be in
a position to devote more time and energy than younger faculty to program
development.
That is not to say that there are
not senior faculty who are ineffective who should perhaps retire because it is
in the best interests of the institution.
Cleary new or junior faculty can also be equally ineffective. What is clear is that the retirement decision,
right or wrong and by and large, is a personal faculty decision rather than an
institutional choice. In addition, there
is no existing literature that shows retiring faculty consider what is in the
best interests of their institution when they make their decision as a primary,
secondary or important factor in that decision.
Individual faculty no doubt may consider their colleagues and students
but they may not consider the broader institutional impacts of retirement nor
do they have the information or perspective to accurately consider this in the
first place in most cases.
The Number of Faculty Retirees. While there is relatively limited data on
faculty other than occasional national studies and the annual AAUP salary data,
there is enough to predict that retirement is an issue. Even IPEDs data is very limited with respect
to faculty data. One can extrapolate
however from the data that does exist that the professoriate is aging. Data collected on faculty age cohorts shows
that in 1979 the largest proportion of faculty were 36-40 years of age; in 1989
the largest proportion were 46-50 and in 1999 the greatest proportion were
51-55 (National Research Council, 1999; U.S. Department of Education, 2001)
(See Figure 2). The trend in aging of
the professoriate may be the result of an increase in the average age of newly
hired faculty and a decrease in the retirement rate of existing faculty members
(Clark and Hammond, 1998). But again,
because the rate of retirement since the 1990s has appeared to have slowed down
a bit does not mean, given the aging of the faculty, and the absolute finite
nature of time that people have in life and the inevitable fact that they will
simply run out of time, that there is not the potential for a significant wave
of retirements or departures over the next decade. Simply put academic administrators and
institutions of higher education must consider this issue as critical over the
next several years and decade given the impacts and costs.
Adapted
from the U.S. Department of
Education, National Center for Educational Statistics, National Study of
Postsecondary Faculty, 1988; U.S.
Department of Education, National
Center for Education
Statistics, 2001.
It is perhaps concerning that
there is limited research on faculty retirement since the 1994 change in law
ending mandatory retirement (Sugar et al., 2005). This might be due to the strength in the
numbers of students pursuing higher education or maybe it is due to the growth
in institutional acceptance of using part-time faculty to meet their
instructional needs. Possibly the lack
of research is due to the availability of qualified new faculty and if that is
the case institutions are not experiencing challenges with senior faculty
retirements and subsequent replacement.
Evidently, understanding the
trends, realities and policy implications of faculty retirement has not been a
priority for many researchers and it has certainly been difficult to plan for
operationally at the institutional level.
There are researchers that focus on these issues as is clear from the
literature cited throughout this paper.
It is also important to keep in mind that the lack of current research
focus in this area does not mean that it is not an issue worthy of much more
research and operational attention and given the trends it is more than likely to
become more important as an issue over the coming decades.
Concerns with Faculty
Retirement. One of the concerns
about delayed retirement of older faculty is that it will reduce job
opportunities for new faculty, women and minorities and will reduce the quality
of instruction and research productivity (Bahrami, 2001; Clark
and d’Ambrosio, 2005). If these concerns
are founded, then institutions and academic administrators should be focused on
strategically addressing retirement planning, incentives and strategies. While there is no immediate and tangible
benefit for planning for faculty retirement at the institutional level, there
are near term costs for not doing so as the trend lines clearly suggest that
there will be a significant number of retirements. If there is a decline in quality as a result
of faculty aging it is also important that institutions create a responsible
approach to address that issue. The
latter is not easily contemplated or accomplished with senior faculty.
While many administrators may
believe that junior faculty will be more productive, more adaptable to new
technologies and ideas, and better able to communicate with students (Chronister
and Reed, 1994; Holden and Hansen, 1989; Morrell, 1993; Smith, 1991), that view
is not empirically established. Assuming
it is true for a moment, it suggests that there may be an appropriate balance
between the senior faculty and new faculty as institutions strive to have an
appropriate balance between their traditions and the new and innovative. There is currently no literature that
documents or discusses what an appropriate balance of new and senior faculty
should be at the institutional level.
Conversely, it has been shown that senior faculty are more productive researchers
(See Dorfman in particular). There is
limited evidence that shows new technologies result in deeper or better
learning but none that demonstrates that innovation is the exclusive claim of
new faculty. Communication with students
is the most logical of the negatives presented against senior faculty but even
that belief may be irrelevant because it is important that students are exposed
to a broad range of viewpoints and perspectives as well as communications
styles and senior faculty have an important part to play in that process.
Interestingly, it has been shown
that faculty in private universities in general retire later than those in
public universities and research oriented institutions differ from teaching
institutions (Baharmi, 2001). This is
likely due to the fact that the average salaries at private institutions are
generally higher than those at public institutions and the literature suggests
that more highly compensated faculty tend to retire latter than less highly
compensated faculty.
Sugar et al., 2005 suggest that
rather than thinking of faculty in terms of age, it would be more helpful to
think of them in terms of their career trajectory and the different strengths
that junior and senior faculty bring to the professorate (p. 409). This is an important suggestion in that there
could well be senior faculty with strengths that should be celebrated and
maintained and considered in balance with those of new energetic junior
faculty.
Most research shows there are
large individual differences among institutions in the age structures of their
faculty (Holden and Hansen, 1989); and there are also differences noted by discipline. So some fields, such as physics, have higher
proportions of senior faculty than do other fields. It is also important to note there are
differences within institutions that complicate this issue. For example, if the College
of Science has a high proportion of
senior faculty as opposed to the College
of Liberal Arts that may
be more problematic for an institution given the costs associated with hiring
new faculty in science and the competition for new faculty in sciences nationally. Conversely, if the liberal arts area teaches
the institution’s core curriculum and there are a high percentage of
retirements in that area that has the potential to weaken or change all
programs at the institution. Financial implications
aside, liberal arts faculty are somewhat easier to replace than science faculty. The affects of retirements in Liberal Arts
may be broader than in the Sciences. While
retirements in both science and liberal arts have significant potential for distressing
the institution, it may be easier to address building one faculty than the
other. This is a rather simple example
of a decidedly much more complex situation that exists across disciplines at
even small colleges and universities.
The Decision to Retire
A variety of factors, such as the
uncapping of the retirement age, current salary, eligibility for full
retirement benefits, other sources of income, early retirement incentives,
social security income, preference for leisure, teaching effectiveness, type of
institution, and the level of education of faculty have a significant influence
on faculty members’ decisions to retire (Bahrami, 2001, p. 297). The decision is therefore based on a complex
mixture of factors and largely based on individual faculty considerations.
The literature appears to suggest
however that financial and health considerations are a primary consideration of
individual faculty when they consider retirement. That is not to say the softer concerns such
as preference for leisure or family considerations are not important only that
the financial issues are considered first in the decision to retire. The research is consistent on this and it
shows that the most powerful predictor of delayed retirement in the higher
education sector was “fear of inadequate income during the first two years of
retirement” (Montgomery, 1989, p. 57).
Others have found that faculty are less likely to retire if they
anticipate a higher salary; and they are more likely to retire if they anticipate
a greater pension income during retirement (Euster, 2004). Money matters in the retirement decision,
which should not be a surprise to any academic administrator.
The reasons given by faculty for
retirement are similar to other professions and include the desire to do other
things and hence, to have more free time, an awareness that time is finite,
being tired of the routine and duties of the job and poor health (Henretta,
Chan, and O’Rand, 1992; Kimmel, Price and Walker, 1978; Parnes and Sommers,
1994). Much of the literature iterates
that poor health or health concerns are significant precursors to retirement
for many senior faculty.
Conversely, Dorfman (2002) found,
in her study of a selected sample of faculty aged 70-74, that most professors
who continued to work said they did so mainly because they enjoyed their work
and because they thought it was important to continue that work (p. 23). Those that did retire did so for health reasons. Dorfman (2002) also argues that virtually all
retirement studies indicate that health is a major factor in the decision to
continue working or to retire. Faculty
report they will continue to work because they are committed to their work and
enjoy what they are doing (Dorfman, 2000).
One can argue that regardless of age if faculty enjoy what they are
doing they will continue at their current institution.
Anderson et al., (1986)
determined that the retirement decision among the general workforce is influenced
by both the current value of relevant variables such as income, inflation, and
health and by expectations about their future.
Faculty contemplating retirement are not all that different from the
considerations undertaken by individuals in the general workforce with perhaps
the notable exception that many institutions of higher education have
implemented retirement benefit programs that are generous when compared to the
range offered to workers in general. Faculty
may, on that basis, have more confidence in income factors in the retirement
decision and especially if they have planned and invested appropriately. Institutions of higher education have been
very encouraging on retirement issues and the long-term result in the next
century should be an even better situation for faculty contemplating retiring
because their financial situations will be advantageous.
Research on both older faculty
and the general retirement literature suggests that interest in a commitment to
work impact how long older individuals continue to work (Dorfman, 2000; Parnes
and Sommers, 1994). It is important to
note that the interest that is generally referred to as commitment to work
impact is not from the institutional perspective but from the individual
view. Faculty are focused on teaching
and scholarship in this individual view.
The literature has not addressed the institutional views when assessing
faculty decisions to retire.
Research has also shown that
faculty with strong research orientations are likely to remain in their
positions longer than teaching oriented faculty (Monahan and Greene, 1987;
Smith, 1991). In fact, the most
successful researchers – those with lighter teaching loads and higher incomes –
are more likely to work into their 70s, other things being equal (Lozier and
Dooris, 1991; Leslie and Janson, 2005).
This reality is important from an institutional perspective as one can
argue that senior faculty with strong research orientations are generally more
productive than new faculty with respect to generating overhead or indirect
revenues. That is particularly the case
where external funding is concerned as more experienced faculty researchers are
usually better able to win grant competitions and to know how to write
effective grant proposals than are new developing faculty.
Career and retirement decisions
are ultimately individual decisions, and the significance of personal
interactions, the work environment, leadership, and so on cannot be discounted
(Lozier and Dooris, 1991, p. 105). It
might be possible given these considerations to encourage or discourage faculty
retirement decisions. Obviously that is
not to say that the institution should work to interfere with personal
interactions or the work environment.
Conversely, the institution may focus on the best interests of the
institution in the short and long-terms and if that requires faculty to be
focused on active teaching, technology enhanced teaching or other foci that
senior faculty may not be amenable to embracing then the focus should be on
building the institution for the long-term.
On the other hand if the institutional focus is on building more
research or external funding, senior faculty might be focused upon to help
build that aspect of the institution.
That is not to say the junior faculty can’t write successful proposals
or that they are not successful in this area, or that there are not senior
faculty who produce nothing in this arena, only that faculty with decades of
experience tend to be better grant proposal writers. In reality most institutions will be
somewhere between these two extremes.
Interestingly, women appear far
more affected by their family situations (including household income and
spouse’s employment) than are men when making retirement decisions (Leslie and
Janson, 2005, p. 42). As the
professoriate becomes more female over time this is an important consideration
in planning for retirements of faculty for the institution but that is
certainly, at this writing, a much longer-term issue. While this phenomenon potentially adds a
level of complexity to the issue, men are likely to consider their spouse in
their decisions as well.
Research has shown that faculty
on defined-contributions plans are less likely than those on defined-benefits
plans to retire at or near traditional retirement ages (Clark, Ghent, and Kreps,
2001). Defined-contributions plans (e.g.,
TIAA-CREF) are increasingly the norm in higher education. The downside of these plans for faculty and
institutions is that their value is sensitive to the broad economic
fluctuations in the economy. During the
booming 1990s when the economy was particularly strong there appears to have
been a surge of retirements, conversely in a slower growth economy or
investment situation, such as has been the case to a larger extent after September
2001 until very recently, there may be fewer faculty retirements due to the
less stellar value of their portfolio and perhaps their perception, and
historical evidence, that the high point of the past of the 1990s will return.
The focus is more individual
although there is a belief and connection to the “field” the institutional
consideration is not really a primary concept in faculty considerations, at
least that has not been a reported empirical result or research focus.
Early Retirement Incentives
Phased or early retirement
incentive programs are programs that offer faculty members nearing traditional
retirement age (e.g., 65) a variety of financial incentives, coupled with reduced
work loads, to induce them to retire (Leslie and Janson, 2005, p. 42). Usually, phased retirement programs are
formalized in order to ensure equal treatment and to standardize the incentives
for faculty to retire in a predictable and orderly way (Leslie and Janson,
2005). Formalized programs are those
that define the time frame, buyouts and other conditions of retirement based on
an agreement between a class of faculty (usually determined by a minimum age)
and the institution.
Piper (2001) suggests that
retirement decisions are influenced by the structure of the pension fund as
much as by early retirement incentives.
Structured early retirement programs may be easier to manage than
occasional programs and the former can be more clearly presented to and
perceived as fair by faculty. Structured
programs can be developed and should involve legal council, human resources,
finance and academic affairs administration.
Eligibility for phased retirement
is often based on age and years of service, and it typically requires the
waiver of tenure rights, has a limited time frame, reduces the faculty member’s
work load (most commonly to 50%), reduces the salary in proportion to the
reduction in workload, and continues benefits (Leslie and Janson, 2005, p.
43). These are most typically “class”
offers (e.g., all faculty 63 years of age or older at the institution) with
limited duration although a few institutions have standing programs. These programs can be supported with
endowment but may also be funded over multiple operational years. These programs are also based on a fair bit
of collaboration between human resources, academic affairs leadership, finance
and administration and must have strong support from the president and
ultimately the board.
Leslie and Janson (2005) also
found that only about 4 percent of all tenured faculty at four-year
institutions are in some kind of phased retirement arrangement and that faculty
who participate in such programs do so in the early 60s but phasing appears to
be comparatively rare among faculty over 64 (p. 43). So again, retirement for the most senior faculty
is on their terms. The few who actually
take advantage of these programs benefit, but it is unclear they are really
necessary or good for the institution. Clark and D’Ambrosio report that recent
research indicates that phased-retirement plans have increased the total number
of faculty retiring from the university (Clark and d’Ambrosio, 2005) and also
that these plans have become more popular and will become, perhaps, the normal
or preferred transition to retirement among university faculty. Perhaps, but this will be at the expense of
the institution. Assuming this reality,
it behooves administrators to structure these programs so the institution
receives a return on the long-term investment that is made in senior faculty
and for the short-term costs of phased retirement programs. Indeed this is a tall order to fill. This further encourages short-term programs
that can be adjusted with institutional needs as the primary focus.
For many faculty, a menu of
services from which they can choose will be important with respect to early
retirement including continued access to the internet, parking passes, access
to some form of office space, library privileges and other amenities that
faculty typically enjoy such as visibility in their departments and listing in
the faculty directory or on the website (Sugar et al., 2005, p. 415). Some retiring faculty are interested in
part-time teaching, continuing their research, service on graduate committees,
mentoring junior faculty, service on university-wide committees and assisting
with alumni fundraising (Sugar et al., 2005).
Other features of these programs include giving extra credit for years
of service to increase the annual retirement benefits and the limitation of the
enrollment window (Clark and d’Ambrosio,
2005). Essentially emeritus faculty
programs provide these sorts of benefits and connections for retiring faculty. The balance of the research done for this
paper shows that faculty incentives are not attractive if the faculty are
happy, healthy and well paid.
Phased retirement is more widely
elected at institutions where a greater proportion of the faculty workload is
teaching and less widely elected at research universities (Leslie and Janson,
2005). This is very important for
institutions desiring to keep or increase their research capability. There may be possibilities or approaches that
could create the transfer of knowledge from senior teaching faculty at teaching
institutions to junior faculty to create legacy of teaching excellence.
There is relatively limited
information available about the outcomes of retirement incentive programs for
faculty. That is, there is little
reported research that shows the effects or effectiveness of these approaches
for either the individual faculty or institutions of higher education. This is interesting given these programs are
fairly common in higher education today rather than the exception. Basically we do not have good information on
whether they “work” or achieve the intended goals.
To encourage voluntary retirement
prior to age 70 most schools provide some financial incentive, buyout or have
phased retirement programs (Sugar et al., 2005). So it is interesting that more is not known
about the results of these incentive programs.
Perhaps, it may also be difficult to study this issue given the
potential reluctance of institutions to disclose details about these legal
arrangements.
The Carnegie Foundation reported
in the early 1990’s that the number of faculty intending to retire prior to
their 63rd birthday is significant and they found that nearly 4 out
of 10 faculty under the age of 60 intend to retire early and as many as 17%
stated they would retire in their 50’s (Carnegie Foundation, 1990). It is also interesting to note that the
Carnegie Foundation study found that faculty are not particularly enamored with
their institution’s retirement plan (p. 2), yet they still project that they
will retire early. Early retirees also gave
their institutions low ratings with respect to the sense of community,
intellectual environment and the quality of life (Carnegie Foundation,
1990). This is an interesting finding
and it may suggest that early retirement incentives can indeed renew the
institution with more dedicated connected new faculty that choose to be in
their academic careers at the institution.
But the Carnegie study was done prior to 1994 and the change in
requirements for retirement could well have changed the faculty perspective. Another source of anxiety for early retirees
in the Carnegie Foundation study is the perception that undergraduate students
are seriously under-prepared and that they require too much attention and they
are unmotivated. There is also limited
literature about the generational gaps that no doubt exist between senior
faculty and students. It is certainly
logical to suggest that that has the potential for significant impact in
faculty decisions to retire or stay.
Recent data on faculty
retirements (Yakoboski, 2005) shows that as many as half of the faculty
surveyed considered themselves very likely to take advantage of a phased
retirement program if available and an additional third reported to be somewhat
likely to take advantage of such a program.
This suggests that phased retirement is certainly on the minds of the
faculty and given the age distribution this is a very important institutional
consideration. In addition, should the
institution desire renewal, it appears the timing is good if these opinions are
matched with actions. Succession should
be thought about, however, and the institution must be considered. When offering such plans they could be
managed by setting the age limits of the offer higher or lower depending on the
size of the faculty group that could take advantage of it and goals of the
institution and the associated costs.
The TIAA-CREF Institute data also
provides interesting recent data on the faculty expectations to retire early
(See Figure 3, below). What these data
appear to show is that about half as many faculty as workers in general expect
to retire under the age of 62, similar proportions expect to retire between 62
and 65 (just over one-third). Hence, about
half of the faculty in the study indicated that they intend to retire by the
age of 65. That means that the other
half intends to retire after they reach the age of 65. The effects of age and health aside these
data suggest that institutions of higher education will have a significant
number of senior faculty over the age of 65.
The Yakoboski study further shows that 28% of the faculty respondents
intend to retire at 70 or older or never plan to retire (p. 9).
Adapted from Yakoboski, P. (2005). Trends and Issues:
Findings from the Retirement Confidence Survey of College and University
Faculty, TIAA-CREF Institute, www.tiaa-crefinstitute.org.
While Lozier and Dooris (1991)
found that the two most salient factors to influence retirement decisions were
overall financial status and eligibility for full retirement benefits, the
availability of an early retirement incentive was important when it was made
available. They also suggest that it is
questionable whether retirement incentive programs that become permanent or are
available to all prospective retirees produce the desired effect and it may be
more useful to have them limited in duration and scope (p. 104). The argument is that shorter-term offers of
retirement incentives are more likely to encourage faculty to consider the plan
rather than a standing plan that is viewed as always in place with no real time
sensitivity.
Standing early retirement may
change higher education negatively by increasing the managerial approach and it
may change different universities differently (Shelley, 1998). That is, early retirement, if formalized, can
lead to a standing approach that does not allow for individualized methods or
plans with and for particular faculty or situations that require creative and
appropriate solutions. On the other hand
having a standardized package to present might encourage those who are ready to
retire more readily and may reduce some of the unevenness in the application of
these approaches.
Sugar et al., 2005 suggest that
early retirement incentive programs that followed the change in law in 1994 may
have had the effect on the most productive faculty leaving their institutions
only to move to other universities, and others who would have retired anyway
were given generous and, perhaps, unnecessary incentives. Since little is known about the results of
early retirement incentive programs, beyond individual institutional
experiences with such approaches, it is likely that the result that was offered
by Sugar et al., is potentially the current situation.
The down side of early retirement
incentive programs is that they may induce some of the most highly productive
faculty to retire earlier than anticipated (Crawley, 1995) whereas less productive
faculty often retire without any special retirement incentives (Durbin et al.,
1984). The use of limited and costly institutional
resources is inefficient in both cases.
The goals of early retirement incentives to achieve retirement decisions
by unproductive faculty while retaining productive senior faculty leaders are
difficult to achieve to say the least.
But it is not naïve to suggest this as possible and that it should be
considered planned for and components of the institutional perspective in
faculty retirement planning.
Faculty decide to accept phased
retirement most typically because of the effects of age, their health has
declined, they are dissatisfied with their work or burned out, retirement had
become an issue in their marriage, or their financial situation allowed them to
relinquish their work without sacrificing security (Leslie and Janson, 2005, p.
44). Given these findings, phased
retirement has clearly positive benefits for the institution. A few others have also reported similar
results. For example, Kim and Feldman
(1997) found that poor health, low current salary, higher pension benefits, and
declining productivity were significantly related to faculty members’ early
retirement decisions (p. 69-70).
Faculty may be reluctant to
retire fully because they dread losing contact with their colleagues and the
intellectual and social life they had enjoyed as full members of the campus
community (Leslie and Janson, 2005, p. 45).
Emeritus faculty programs may address these concerns somewhat and they
could be enhanced to focus on incentives and connections for retiring faculty
and for institutions. On the other hand,
age may lead to a growing generational gap with younger faculty and
increasingly diverse students, from whom some older faculty members feel progressively
more alienated (Leslie and Janson, 2005).
The balance of costs and benefits
for phased retirement seems to favor the individual faculty members in that
they receive reduced work load and greater control over their time, while they
do generally ask faculty to relinquish tenure and sometimes to concede the best
teaching assignments and lab spaces. The
phased retiree faculty member gains financially if they have planned properly
prior to participation in the program (Leslie and Janson, 2005, p. 46). That is, at the same time as they move from
full time to part-time status, phased retirement offers faculty a great deal of
control over their work time which is arguably more valuable at that point in
their careers, and especially for active researchers, than is continuing the
full-time routine.
The benefit of phased retirements
for institutions is that they can recapture a portion of the salary from senior
faculty positions and can plan for renewal based on a promise of retirement
(Leslie and Janson, 2005). In addition,
such phased retirement programs make replacement a question given that it may
take multiple budget years to fully implement.
That is, it could take three years for the salary of a phased retiree
faculty member to be made fully available for replacement.
There has also been salary
compression over time and at some less elite institutions the salary of the
senior faculty may not permit replacement to occur on half a salary. At the very least the institution has a final
decision and time line that allows for planning of renewal of the faculty position. The other advantage of phased retirement is
that it can encourage academic leaders at the institution to work on transition
with the phased faculty member and to “pick their brains” about the school,
college or department with the benefit of the senior faculty member’s
experience and their new insider/outsider status.
Other benefits include the fact
that senior faculty who have long-served the institution are unlikely to work
only half time on phased retirement. The
reality is that most of the best faculty work much longer hours than is
required given the nature of their work and the amount of dedication and time
it takes to be the best at what they do.
Not that it should be argued that institutions should take advantage of
this situation with higher expectations, only that faculty pride in their work
is likely to result in this institutional benefit.
Individual departments have the
most difficulty with phased retirement programs given they are typically not
permitted to hire a replacement during the program implementation and they do not
have the benefit of the full availability of the faculty member in
pre-retirement status (Leslie and Janson, 2005). This is an interesting institutional
dilemma. Early retirement plans should
be developed based on discussions with the departments and schools/colleges at
the institution. However, once the
program is offered it typically must be offered to a class of faculty based on
their ages, which does not discriminate or allow for specialized programs by
departments. If a standing early
retirement program is in place additional components should or could be added
to enhance it but these must be added to all faculty members given the
offer. Early retirement is a larger
institutional function that does not focus at the departmental level. That is also a very important gap in the
literature on faculty retirement given that departments are likely to feel the
consequences of early retirements most acutely.
Another issue in early retirement programs, or faculty
retirement for that matter, that is important is health insurance
coverage. Gustman and Steinmeier (1994)
found that employer-provided health insurance had a small net effect on early
retirement of men but their research may have been too close to the mandatory
retirement era. In 2005, Sugar et al.,
found that health-care coverage is a critical aspect of financial well being
which is a key retirement consideration and the safety net of continuing
health-care coverage is important (p. 414).
The survey of faculty retirement planning conducted by Yakoboski (2005)
found that most faculty expect their institution to pay for health care about a
third expect to share the costs and about one fifth expect to pay the costs
themselves. Logically, health care is a
key issue for retiring faculty or retirees and given the typical double-digit
annual increases in costs to individuals in health care insurance over the past
few years this is likely to be important in any early retirement incentive program. Although limited some research suggests that
institutions, in response to higher health-care costs for retirees, will
increase retiree costs for premiums, deductibles, and co-payments, or reduce coverage
or both (AAUP, 2003). Higher education
is as challenged by the cost increases in health care as are other people-centric
industries. The difference, perhaps, is
that higher education includes a larger number of highly skilled professionals
and it is very human resource dependent.
Faculty are a core essential part of the delivery of higher education.
Bahrami and Stockrahm (2001)
suggest that administrative measures such as annual performance evaluations,
salary caps for unsatisfactory performance, meaningful post-tenure review and a
well-designed merit raise system may encourage some faculty to retire (p. 59). Conversely, Tizard and Owen (2001) suggest
that provision for adequate research facilities and appropriate recognition for
their work might well prove to be attractive retirement disincentives for
faculty. The balance between the
individual faculty member and institutional needs is key to administrative
programs or approaches to retirement.
There are model phased retirement
programs that seem to provide a more gradual and defined exit strategy for
faculty. For example, one such program
established a teaching role and title of “Resident Professor” for up to the
first three years of retirement (Allen, 1993) where other programs allow for
pre-retirement sabbaticals.
Implications and Suggestions
In the end, most faculty will
retire about the traditional age (Leslie and Janson, 2005) but it is also clear
that academic and institutional administrators should evaluate their own circumstances
and adopt the best human resource policies to achieve their desired objectives
(Clark and d’Ambrosio, 2005). These objectives
may change from time to time and should be adjusted accordingly. The actual age distribution of the faculty
should be studied by academic and other administrators and considered over the
long-term with an institutional focus.
Offering a phased retirement
incentive program to faculty, even if relatively few faculty actually elect to
take the program offer, may encourage faculty to begin planning for retirement
(Leslie and Janson, 2005). But no single
retirement program will be equally satisfying to all senior faculty (Sugar et
al., 2005). While these plans make
sense, they also create challenges at the departmental level that must be
considered. It is important, however,
that such plans be used when appropriate.
If the institution desires to permanently
reduce its faculty size, early-retirement plans can be cost-effective; however,
if the institution will quickly replace the retiring faculty, the university
will end of paying higher retirement benefits and still must pay the salary of
the new professor and in such circumstances, less costly phased-retirement
plans may be more cost effective (Clark and d’Ambrosio, 2005, p. 398). It is also important that the administrator
keep in mind that faculty may retire on their own without such plans.
It has been suggested that the
elimination of mandatory retirement could induce some ineffective faculty
members to stay on the job beyond the age of 70 and this may hinder some
institutions to do their job effectively and efficiently (Bahrami and
Stockrahm, 2001). The new thinking on
this impending retirement wave is that, rather than encouraging older workers
to retire, it may be best for the institution to encourage them to continue
working (Sugar et al., 2005) assuming they are engaged and effective. Clearly institutional needs, benefits and
long-term interests should be considered in the faculty retirement equation.
Peterson (2003) suggests that
economic and curricular realities may move higher educational institutions to
cooperate in new ways, encouraging broader cooperation and collaboration across
institutions on faculty hiring and retirements.
Rising enrollments and voluntary retirements of a large number of
faculty can increase the demand for faculty and the small number of faculty
over the age of 65 will be welcomed (Ashenfelter and Card (2002). That is institutions may work together on
coordinated retirement programs to allow benefits for the institutions and the
faculty retirees.
Administrators should work to
understand, monitor and make projections about the faculty retirement
possibilities at their institutions. The
age distribution should be clearly known.
Institutions should also organize retirement seminars for faculty to
keep the issue in the forefront of the faculty and to encourage appropriate
planning and conversations. It is also
important that department chairs and deans be brought into the conversations concerning
faculty retirement given their front-line responsibilities with faculty
retirement, hiring and phasing programs.
It is also important to have conversations among academic leadership,
with the president and human resources, and finance about the issues
surrounding faculty retirement so there is a good understanding and coordinated
response as it occurs. Health care is clearly
a primary concern for retiring faculty and but there are many factors to be
considered in this issue.
References
Allen, D.R. (1993). The Faculty Perspective. In Julius, N.B. and Krauss (Eds.),
The
Aging
Work Force; A
Guide for Higher Education Administrators (pp. 191-202). Washington D.C.:
College and University Personnel Association
American Association of
University Professors (AAUP (2003).
Unequal Progress: The Annual
Report on the Economic
Status of the Profession 2002-2003.
Academe
89(2): 22-33.
Anderson, H., Burkhauser, R.V. and Quinn, J.F. (1986). Do Retirement Dreams Come True?
The Effect of Unanticipated Events
on Retirement Plans.
Industrial and
Labor Relations Review 39: 518-526.
Ashenfelter, O. and Card, D. (2002). Did the Elimination of
Mandatory Retirement Affect
Faculty Retirement?
American Economic Review, 92(4):
957-980.
Bahrami, B.
(2001). Factors Affecting Faculty
Retirement Decisions.
The Social
Science
Journal 38: 297-305.
Bahrami, B. and Stockrahm, J.W. (2001). Analysis of Faculty
Retirement Intention: Using a
Proportional Odds Model.
The Journal of Applied Business Research,
17(3): 55-60.
Carnegie Foundation (1990).
Early Faculty Retireees: Who, Why, and What Impact? The
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teaching.
Change, 22(4):
31-34.
Christian Science Monitor (2006). From Baby Boomers
to Seniors, 98 (177): 18.
Chronister, J.L. and Reed, K. (1994). Assessing the Effectiveness of Voluntary
Retirement In
centive Options for Faculty: A Case
Study.
CUPA Journal, 45(3):
29-33.
Clark, R.L. and d’Ambrosio,
M.B. (2005). Recruitment, Retention, and
Retirement:
Compensation and Employment
Policies for Higher Education.
Educational Gerontology, 31: 385:403.
Clark, R.L. and Hammond,
P.B. (1998). To Retire or Not? Examining
Life After the End of
Mandatory Retirement in Higher
Education.
Research Dialogues
(Proceedings), No. 58, pp. 1016.
Clark, R.L., Ghent,
L.L. and Kreps, J. (2001). Faculty Retirement at Three North Carolina
Universities. In Clark, R.L. and Hammond (Eds.),
To Retire or Not? Retirement Policy and Practice in Higher
Education (pp. 21-38). Philadelphia: University
of Pennsylvania Press.
Crawley, A.L. (1995).
Senior Faculty renewal at Research Universities: Implications for