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Reasons for Working and Their Relationship to Retirement Attitudes, Job Satisfaction and Occupational Self-Efficacy of Bridge Employees
150
Citations
34
References
2005
Year
Quality Of LifeMultigenerational WorkforceRetirement AttitudesHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyOccupational Self-efficacyEmployee AttitudeManagementCareer ConcernWork AttitudeJob SatisfactionApplied Social PsychologyBridge EmploymentWorkforce DevelopmentSociologyU.s. PopulationBusinessBaby BoomersWorklife BalanceBridge Employees
Although the Baby Boomers are the fastest growing segment of the U.S. population and they are quickly approaching retirement age, research has widely neglected to look at the reasons as to why many of them intend on opting for bridge employment as opposed to completely retiring. This study examined the relationships among four reasons for working (social, personal, financial, and generative) and three attitudinal responses to bridge employment (job satisfaction, retirement attitudes, and occupational self-efficacy). In a sample of 108 recent retirees holding bridge employment positions, it was found that generativity served as a reliable predictor of job satisfaction and attitudes toward retirement, whereas the social reason for work was only a reliable predictor of attitudes toward retirement.
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