![They Didn’t Expect to Retire Early. The Pandemic Changed Their Plans.](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2021/06/30/business/00retire/00retire-facebookJumbo.jpg)
They Didn’t Expect to Retire Early. The Pandemic Changed Their Plans.
The New York Times
After years in which Americans worked later in life, the latest economic disruption has driven many out of the work force prematurely.
Dee Dee Patten, 57, hadn’t planned to retire early. But when the coronavirus-induced lockdown took hold in 2020 and business dried up at the mechanical repair shop that she and her husband, Dana, owned in Platteville, Colo., they decided to call it quits. Mildred Vega, 56, had even less choice in the matter. Soon after she lost her job because of a restructuring at a Pfizer office in Vega Baja, P.R., the pandemic foreclosed other options. Mrs. Vega and the Pattens are three of the millions of Americans who have decided to retire since the pandemic began, part of a surge in early exits from the work force. The trend has broad implications for the labor market and is a sign of how the pandemic has transformed the economic landscape.More Related News