Welcome to the longevity movement: What to do with a 60-year career


Raise your hand if you want to live to 100.

You might not have a choice. Living to 100 is no longer an anomaly. The number of Americans ages 100 and older is projected to more than quadruple over the next three decades, from an estimated 101,000 in 2024 to about 422,000 in 2054, according to the US Census Bureau.

Longer lifespans are here, and author Michael Clinton spells out the implications of this fundamental demographic shift in his new book, “Longevity Nation: The People, Ideas, and Trends Changing the Second Half of Our Lives.”

I sat down with Clinton, the former president and publishing director of Hearst Magazines, to discuss the challenges ahead and what it means for our careers and retirement right now.

Here are edited excerpts from our recent conversation.

Kerry Hannon: How is retirement an antiquated idea?

Michael Clinton:  It was a construct created a hundred years ago by governments. And prior to that period, people basically worked until they died, because life expectancy was only 62. As the 20th century moved along and life expectancy grew, we had this whole sort of retirement industrial complex created by government, business, and developers, who all tapped into this idea of living out your post-work years having fun playing golf, being in the sun. But life expectancy has grown so much that it has turned the whole retirement concept on its head.

What is the new longevity movement?

It’s this idea that if you’re 60 and healthy, you will live potentially another 30 or 40 years, which creates an entirely new life cycle that previous generations never knew. At 60, you can start a new career for 10 or 20 years if you choose to. You can become an entrepreneur. You can go back to school. You can start a creative life and become a painter, writer, whatever. It’s this enormous gift of additional time. Someone might have two or three different careers. We’re on the cusp of an entirely new era.

Read more: How much can you contribute to your 401(k) in 2026?

Let’s talk about the 60-year career. How do you see that playing out?

The millennials will have a bit of that, but Gen Z and those who follow will really manifest this six-decade career. Many studies have predicted that today’s five-year-old has a 50% chance of living to be a hundred. People won’t have one linear career like previous generations did. That is dissolving right in front of us. They will end up having multiple careers, which may mean lateral moves. It may mean moving into new disciplines. It may mean a two- or three-year pause, and then going back to the workforce. Companies and organizations are going to have to restructure around this changing approach to careers.



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