Social attitudes data shows that over recent decades more people are realising that they need to work for longer, and often that is through necessity more than choice. The state pension age reached 66 for the first time in 2020 and will rise to 67 in the years to come. Having a choice over how and when you work over the age of 60 is a key indicator of wellbeing and quality of life, even when accounting for social background and previous health.
For many people, alongside the financial necessity, are other benefits that good work can bring. Fulfilling work can have many benefits for people’s financial wellbeing, their social connections, meaning and purpose. Offering mid-life support to plan for the future is one way employers can help people to frame their longer working lives and the government is looking promote concepts like the mid-life MOT.
Good work is key to people wanting to work for longer. McKinsey research shows that 25% of an employee’s overall life satisfaction is determined by their job satisfaction. The most important factors in job satisfaction are having an interesting job and having good interpersonal relationships. And good relationships with management account for 86% of whether or not we are satisfied with our relationships at work. Employee satisfaction is essential for businesses too, being positively correlated with customer satisfaction, lower staff turnover, profitability, and productivity.
So work matters, and in particularly the actions of leadership and line managers. They have the opportunity to make jobs better and they certainly run the risk of making jobs worse.