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Ahead of The times I made a counter proposal that they request low interest loans, about half a million dollars per person, to be used as seed capital to start businesses. These enterprises would give them a chance to put all the skills and ideas that they had developed over years of productive labour. They would be expected to employ at least two young people within the first year and to develop a programme to transfer some of their well honed work related attitudes to these young people. They would provide the brains and heart with the young providing the hands and feet, a win/win package. I explained then that money was being inefficiently directed at young people who had little education, limited skills, and poor work attitudes with the expectation at they would become entrepreneurs. I believed then and now that this money could best be cycled through retirees as they were tried and proven. More importantly, this activity would keep the retirees active and healthy, and provide them with income which they would need because chances were they would be living for much longer than any of their retirement plans had anticipated. Naturally, my idea got no traction. The Origins of Retirement Contrary to still widespread stereotypes, there is very little hard evidence to suggest that companies cannot stay competitive with a rising share of older workers. When Danish retailer Netto set up three "oldie" supermarkets, where at least half the staff is over 50, absenteeism went down and customer satisfaction up. The same thing happened at British hardware chain B&Q, whose "elder worker" stores in Manchester and Exmouth were 18 percent more profitable than its regular outlets—due in part, the company says, to six times less employee turnover and 60 percent less pilfering and breakage. These are meaningful numbers. To get around one of the main drawbacks of pay systems that often award workers based on seniority more than performance, some companies are introducing "peak wage" contracts that gradually reduce pay past the age of 55 or 60, often combined with fewer working hours. That kind of flexibility is becoming increasingly popular in Japan, where Nomura Securities in December became the latest company to announce such a programme. Starting in April 2006, all employees who wish to work past retirement can be rehired after 60 at more-flexible hours and pay, and often in a different job. The surprising news for many younger workers who are dreaming of a life beyond the “rat race” is that most seniors are happy to be working. In America, two thirds of the ’working retired’ say they return to the job because they want to, not because they have to. When Finland raised the retirement age in the 1990s, polls showed that most Finns saw working longer as an opportunity to stay integrated in a social life often centered on the workplace. The Crisis For Jamaica My prediction is that Jamaica and other developing countries will also be impacted in other ways. The developed world will soon begin to adjust their immigration policies to attract more young skilled persons from high birthrate countries. So while we prepare ourselves for the longer work life and more flexible hours, we will need to also considerably increase the number of people who leave secondary schools who are able to meet matriculation criteria. This will allow us to increase the number of our skilled and professional classes to not just replace those who choose to migrate but to meet our own local needs. We will also be able to enter into bilateral arrangements with organizations and companies in low birth rate countries to train people specifically for their needs. This will ensure that they pay for the training provided and that Jamaica is compensated. As the price for sugar and bananas go down, we would get a premium for educated and skilled Jamaicans.
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