The Christian Science Monitor

Why pandemic forced baby boomers to rethink retirement plans

Wendy Northcross poses in the JFK Museum she co-founded and where she will work after she retires at the end of June, on May 24, 2021, in Hyannis, Massachusetts. She is currently the CEO of the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce. The pandemic has affected people’s thoughts about retirement.

When she turned 65, Wendy Northcross knew she wasn’t ready to retire. When the coronavirus hit a year later, she told the board of the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce that she’d stay on as CEO until the pandemic was over.

Then came the 20-hour workdays as local business owners flooded in, looking for ways to stave off bankruptcy.

“It was like working a business emergency hospital,” she recalls. “Businesses would come in and you’d triage them. ... I’d be up at midnight to 2 in the morning looking for grants or resources.”

The economy rebounded quickly enough that many of those threatened firms survived. But by October Ms. Northcross was exhausted, and by then it was clear the pandemic would have a lasting effect on the business climate.

“It just gave me clarity that it is actually a good time to step down and hand off to someone with energy and new ideas,” she says.

So on June 30, Ms. Northcross will join the surging ranks of Americans calling it quits on

A surge in joblessness – and retirementA future harder to predictIs meaning of retirement changing?

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