Early retirement was a symptom of the pandemic. Why many aren't going back to work

Last year, many Americans who retired early during the pandemic were mulling a return to the workforce, casting themselves as potential saviors of a labor market beset by severe worker shortages.

No longer.

Just 14.2% of retirees say they plan to go back to work, down from 18.2% in February 2022, according to a survey last month by Morning Consult, a decision intelligence and research company. Among those who quit working in the most recent two-year period, 29.1% say they’ll come back, down from 34.4%. The data is based on the most recent three-month average of responses.

Perhaps more tellingly, 60.5% of retirees say they wouldn’t return to work under any circumstances, up from a low of 48.1% in May 2022, the Morning Consult survey shows.

Many have settled into post-career routines, and the forces that were luring them back to the grind, such as high inflation, a hot job market and tumbling 401(k) balances, have abated, at least to some extent, says Jesse Wheeler, senior economist of Morning Consult.

The upshot: Don’t count on retirees to solve pandemic-related labor shortages that have eased substantially across the nation but persist in industries such as health care and education.

“I wouldn’t put (that group) anywhere near the top of the list” of demographic factions likely to return to the workforce, says economist Dante DeAntonio of Moody’s Analytics.

Instead, it’s the return to the labor force of workers in their prime working years – 25-54 – that has boosted the share of Americans working or looking for jobs and helped alleviate labor shortages, DeAntonio says. Many stay-at-home mothers are taking advantage of remote work options or some increased availability of child care services.

That, in turn, has moderated wage growth and inflation, helping convince the Federal Reserve to pause its aggressive interest rate hikes.

Why did so many people retire during the pandemic?

In 2020, with COVID-19 raging, many people in their 50s and 60s moved up their retirement timetables and bolted because of increased health risks, burnout and 401(k) plans that were swollen by a booming stock market.

By 2022, the pandemic was easing, the labor market was sizzling and inflation was gathering force, prompting many of the early retirees to say they were plotting a comeback. At least some followed through.

What percentage of retirees go back to work?

Through much of last year, 3.2% of workers who had retired a year earlier said they were now working, a figure that topped the pre-pandemic level after falling as low as 2.1% during the health crisis, according to an analysis of Census Bureau figures by Nick Bunker, economic research director for Indeed, top job search site.