Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Most Canadians Expect Semi-Retirement Or Never Stop Working: Poll

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2015 11:25 AM
    OTTAWA — A new survey suggests more than half of Canadians either plan to ease into retirement by working reduced hours before hanging it up for good or have no plans to ever quit.
     
    The report by HSBC found that 45 per cent of working-age Canadians expect some period of semi-retirement before fully packing it in, while another 15 per cent expect to never be able to fully retire.
     
    That's compared with 17 per cent of current retirees surveyed who said they semi-retired before fully retiring.
     
    Betty Miao, HSBC Bank Canada's head of retail banking and wealth management, says while under-employment challenges facing young Canadians are well-known, the report suggests older Canadians are also feeling the pinch.
     
    The survey results come as Canadians balance saving for retirement while grappling with record debt levels.
     
    Statistics Canada said last month that the ratio of household debt to disposable income hit a new high in the fourth quarter of last year, with households owing about $1.63 in consumer credit, mortgage, and non-mortgage loans for every dollar of disposable income.
     
    The record level of debt has been driven in part by a prolonged period of low interest rates that have made borrowing more attractive and helped drive up home prices.
     
    The online survey by HSBC was part of a global review of some 16,000 working and retired people in 15 countries and territories, including 1,000 Canadians.
     
    Compared with Canada's 45 per cent, an average 26 per cent of working-age people globally planned to semi-retire.
     
    According to the survey, 57 per cent of those working-age Canadians planning to semi-retire want to stay in the same job, but work fewer hours, while 35 per cent plan a career change as well as reduced hours.
     
    The HSBC report found that for the Canadians surveyed who did opt for semi-retirement, the decision was a positive one, with 38 per cent choosing to go that route because they didn't want to fully retire immediately.
     
    Another 37 per cent said they continued to work to help keep themselves physically and mentally active.
     
    However, 12 per cent said they could not immediately afford to retire full time, while 18 per cent cited health reasons or physical demands.
     
    The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error as they are not a random sample and therefore are not necessarily representative of the whole population.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Latest train derailment in Ontario shows new safety standards inadequate: TSB

    Latest train derailment in Ontario shows new safety standards inadequate: TSB
    TIMMINS, Ont. — Canada's transport investigator says a freight train derailment in northern Ontario earlier this month suggests new safety requirements for tank cars carrying flammable liquids are inadequate.

    Latest train derailment in Ontario shows new safety standards inadequate: TSB

    Bill's terrorist propaganda provisions overly broad: law professors

    Bill's terrorist propaganda provisions overly broad: law professors
    OTTAWA — A new analysis says a federal proposal to scrub terrorist propaganda from the Internet risks sweeping in too much speech that has no ties to violent threats.

    Bill's terrorist propaganda provisions overly broad: law professors

    Body Found In Richmond, Homicide Investigators Called To Scene

    Body Found In Richmond, Homicide Investigators Called To Scene
    RICHMOND, B.C. — A body has been discovered in Richmond, B.C., and an investigation is underway. Mounties say the body was found at about 6 a.m. Monday.

    Body Found In Richmond, Homicide Investigators Called To Scene

    Mohamed Fahmy voices frustration as retrial postponed to next month

    Mohamed Fahmy voices frustration as retrial postponed to next month
    CAIRO — A Canadian journalist who had been imprisoned for more than a year in Egypt expressed frustration Monday as his retrial on widely-denounced terror-related charges was postponed to next month.

    Mohamed Fahmy voices frustration as retrial postponed to next month

    Woman waiting for flight gives birth at Toronto's Pearson Airport

    Woman waiting for flight gives birth at Toronto's Pearson Airport
    TORONTO — A woman waiting for a flight at Toronto's Pearson Airport ended up getting a trip to the maternity ward instead.

    Woman waiting for flight gives birth at Toronto's Pearson Airport

    Olivia Chow joins Toronto's Ryerson University as a visiting professor

    Olivia Chow joins Toronto's Ryerson University as a visiting professor
    TORONTO — Former MP and Toronto mayoral candidate Olivia Chow has taken a teaching job at Ryerson University.

    Olivia Chow joins Toronto's Ryerson University as a visiting professor