31 comments

  • nate 36 minutes ago

    We probably all have anecdotal evidence here, but my father is a perfect example of being no longer employed and a ton of stuff declining. Yes, cognitively, but a lot of health. We're talking not just your "career". He was a commercial real estate agent. But in his 80s he was working at Menards as a greeter and stocker. And it kept him busy. Getting out of the house. Figuring things out. Meeting and talking to people. Walking. Talking. Scheduling things. He'd even tell us that if he stopped, things would just descend. And he was so right.

    He had to stop to help take more care of my mom, and quickly, he just fell out of all these things. Cognitively. Health. Ability to do anything decision wise or to better himself just tanked.

    Sample size of 1. A ton of confounding variables. But definitely wasn't his choice to stop working at a place because of health. The poor health came after being forced to quit.

    Does make me worry about "taking it easy" when I get older whatever that means :)

    • ericmay 9 minutes ago

      As a general comment, I'd like to say that getting out of the house is a hell of a lot easier when you don't have to drive everywhere to participate in daily life. So and so family member sits at home and watches TV all day is a phenomenon caused primarily by our car-centric culture which, for the elderly, is a barrier to staying healthy but mentally and physically.

    • bcrosby95 9 minutes ago

      It's hard to really say from anecdotes. My uncle retired early and was sharp as a whip until 86 or so. Then decline hit him hard. There was no change in life circumstances, he just got old.

      Also, I think you'll find that taking care of someone who can't take care of themselves is a lot of work. I had to do it for my mom for 6 months and its a ton of stuff. Talking to doctors. Arranging appointments. Etc.

    • steveBK123 12 minutes ago

      Saw similar with my grandmothers. One had a busy social live and volunteer schedule for 20+ years, the other.. did not.

      A reminder that you cannot simply retire FROM something (work, commuting, etc) but must retire TO something (hobbies, social life, second career, volunteering, etc).

      There's always more opportunities in the community than there are volunteers, so look around.

  • goda90 an hour ago

    I believe there have been studies into how social life impacts longevity, and probably cognitive decline as well. For some people, like my great-grandmother who kept working well into her 80s by choice, jobs can be a big social outlet. For others a job can be very socially isolating. Those factors probably matter a lot.

    Side note: I'm sure we'll see research into these areas used to propose delaying retirement age more in the near future.

    • cableshaft an hour ago

      Yeah I work from home. Except for 1-2 short zoom calls a day or talking with my wife, who also works from home, I can go pretty much the whole week without talking to anyone. I try to make sure I go out with friends at least once on the weekends, though, to sort of make up for it.

      But I do wonder if that's going to be a bad thing for me later in my life.

      But I also play a lot of board games, including somewhat complicated solo card games, in my spare time. So I'm hoping that helps counteract things a little bit too.

      • stringfood 3 minutes ago

        Having done both, playing complex board games and card games is not nearly as complicated and engaging for the mind as a full time customer facing job, and not nearly as fulfilling. You get to see smiles and frowns and everything in between in a job and there is no board game that can match the complexity and novelty of random humans asking you to solve their problems.

      • dempedempe 41 minutes ago

        What card games do you play? Do you have any recommendations?

    • appreciatorBus an hour ago

      Your side note implies this would be a bad or nefarious thing? What if it's actually a good decision for both individuals and the public at large?

      • Retric 28 minutes ago

        The issue is using a single factor to push change does not mean that change is a net good.

        As such it’s often a fake justification for what they want to happen for other reasons.

      • goda90 33 minutes ago

        I doubt it would be a good decision for all individuals. Maybe the public at large, but I question if that would be what motivates the people who seek such changes the most.

      • AnimalMuppet 7 minutes ago

        "Good for both individuals and the public at large" is one thing. "We found a club to beat you into doing what we want you to" looks very similar, but is quite different in how it feels and how it works out.

  • tombert 19 minutes ago

    Interesting.

    I haven't read the paper yet so forgive a bit of ignorance here, but I feel like when I'm unemployed, I actively spend all my time trying to learn new things. This is no small part because otherwise I get depressed because I am spending all my time on YouTube and there are only so many "documentaries" about Lolcows that I can stomach, so I dive head first into projects, usually buying a few cheap textbooks in the process to play with new things. The days are way too long if I don't have something interesting to occupy my time, and I feel less guilty if that time is spent doing something quasi-intellectual instead of playing Donkey Kong Country again.

    I didn't think I was an outlier with this, but maybe I am?

    • rrgok 15 minutes ago

      I'm the same. Free Time = Things to explore and learn.

    • seattle_spring 16 minutes ago

      I think you might be. Most retired folks I know just end up watching TV all day. Not even "good" TV-- it's mostly game-shows and 24-hour news cycles.

  • dec0dedab0de 39 minutes ago

    I think employment may set us up for rapid cognitive decline when we finally become unemployed. As in, working 40+ hours a week makes us over-value "vegging out", which sets us up for failure post-employment.

    • funimpoded 31 minutes ago

      Yeah, questions I have: 1) what’s the effect for countries with humane amounts of paid leave (e.g. France’s 7ish weeks plus ten or so holidays) and working hours; and 2) so how about, you know, the idle rich? Should we be forcing them to work 40 hours as gas station clerks, for the good of their mental health? Should we forcibly deny them access to their money sometimes so they have to get a job every now and then?

      I suspect what’s actually going on is that decades on end of employment and the stress of the constant threat of financial ruin causes substantial psychological trauma and absolutely destroys a person’s social self and life, and the idle rich are actually doing fine despite not having jobs, and people in countries that let you live a little bit of life still in your “working years” don’t see this effect so strongly. If that’s true, then it’s incredibly fucked up that the prescription is “more of the thing that robbed you of your humanity to begin with… all to further enrich the idle rich who are not so-traumatized”

  • Bender 36 minutes ago

    I've been retired for about 5 years and I am just as loony now as I was when employed. HN, my own silly hobby sites, flirting with the gals in town and wildlife keep me active.

    • seattle_spring 4 minutes ago

      > I am just as loony now as I was when employed ... flirting with the gals in town and wildlife

      Flirting with the wildlife certainly does fall into the "loony" bucket in my book. Make sure to stay safe!

  • giantg2 34 minutes ago

    I feel like this is less about employment and more a factor of money and engagement.

    You need some amount of money for good health insurance, healthier foods, lower stress, etc. You need engagement, but that could be found in volunteering and sufficiently complex hobbies.

    The trend seen with employment cycles might just be picking up that many people lack these.

  • animitronix 8 minutes ago

    Classic "use it or lose it". No big surprise here.

  • jdw64 an hour ago

    I finally found the reason why my cognitive function feels like that of a 7years old child.

  • bitwize 22 minutes ago

    Anecdata: My dad started experiencing memory problems in his early 70s. When he got back into engineering as a part time consultant, those memory problems went away.

  • LeCompteSftware an hour ago

    It's 48 pages and I haven't read it fully, but it seems almost childlike that the paper doesn't address the obvious confounding variable:

    "Does Unemployment Make It More Likely for Late Middle-Aged People, Particularly Men, To Drink Alcohol? Evidence From We Obviously Should Have Considered This In The Paper, Perhaps We Are Too Sheltered"

    To be clear I am not being pedantic. The paper explicitly endorses the policy of pushing back the retirement age specifically because doing so likely reduces cognitive decline. I agree with this, in the same sense that shooting car thieves in the street without a trial reduces automotive theft. "Reducing cognitive decline in people near retirement age" might be better met with psychiatric intervention, so that unemployed people also get some of the benefits. Ignoring this confounding variable and prattling about "causal explanation" - while endorsing the policy of snatching away people's pensions until they work a few more years - is evil born from ignorance.

    • gruez 37 minutes ago

      >but it seems almost childlike that the paper doesn't address the obvious confounding variable:

      I thought that's the reason why they used "Evidence from Labor Market Shocks"? The idea is that when "Labor Market Shocks" (ie. mass layoffs) happen, the people who lose their jobs are somewhat random, so there isn't the confounding variable of low performers/sick people.

      • LeCompteSftware 26 minutes ago

        It's not about "low performers / sick people," it's unemployment itself (especially sudden layoffs) making people more susceptible to substance abuse, regardless of their health when they're unemployed.

    • littlexsparkee 40 minutes ago

      I have to wonder how much of this is socialization and the valorization of having a job (and the detrimental health effects due to lack). We don't really paint a good picture of what else people could do with their time that's respected or interesting. So many people retire early but not to something - expressing feelings of loss, idle uses of time like TV watching because they haven't developed hobbies / interests due to hegemony of work. We've killed boredom with devices and work, now people can't deal with silence and the existential questions it raises - more comforting to just be told what to do.

  • keybored 7 minutes ago

    > Nevertheless, our group-average findings, if replicated by others, would hold clear policy implications. Federal efforts to promote work at pre-retirement ages would not only reduce reliance on SSDI and enhance retirement security, but would also promote healthy aging through delaying cognitive decline.

    Fuck you.

    Christopher Lasch wrote that our “culture of narcissism” detests aging. Unsurprisingly we, the narcissists, are horrified when we ourselves become old. Because there is hardly anything left for us.

    You can subtract pure biology, i.e. normal bodily degradation. But you can also subtract respect, esteem, wisdom (because who cares what grandpa has to say?), family (see care homes), and socializing.[1] You’re not an “asset” (to use familiar language[2]) to anyone. Just a burden.

    What becomes the solution to any of that? No, no. We don’t need solutions to old people problems. We need solutions to them being burdens.

    So how to make them less of a drag on our collective selves: encourage them to work at their shitty jobs for longer.

    [1] See the old man who meets you again after six months and talks way too much about what he’s up to. Does he have any other outlets?

    [2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47873477

  • josefritzishere 32 minutes ago

    This feels like propaganda, like a peice from the Economist.

  • rts_cts 41 minutes ago

    A strangely click-baity title for an academic paper. What's next? "Four crazy macroeconomic predictions. You won't believe what's number four!"

    • jonas21 38 minutes ago

      Seems like a fairly conventional economics paper title.

      Perhaps you're misparsing the second sentence? "Shocks" is not used as a verb here -- it's a noun, part of the phrase "labor market shocks," which refers to sudden events that disrupt the labor market.