Pay Me For Volunteering

Oxymoronic Volunteers

An ever-growing number of retirees and nonprofit executives say paid volunteering is an apt description of the way modern retirees view nonprofit work. And while no one has gathered statistics on the tendency, experts say there is a good chance that the automatic link between doing good and working for nothing has been permanently severed. “People used to say, ‘Here I am, what do you need done?‘ ” said Deborah Russell, director of work-force issues for AARP. “Today’s retirees say, ‘Here’s what I do well, how can you use it, and what will you pay?’”

Economists, behavioral scientists and gerontologists point to multiple reasons behind the switch. For some retirees, economics ranks high on the list. People expect to live for many decades beyond retirement. Many started their families late, which means they may be financially responsible for children as well as aging parents. They may not want to continue full-time work at high-pressure jobs, and for many, unpaid volunteerism is simply not practical. Even the wealthiest retirees insist on being paid for doing good. Volunteer work used to be considered women’s work, so it is not surprising that career women reject the concept.

Modern organizations are leaner and more competitive than they used to be, and the idea that you get paid for performance, not just for showing up, has taken hold. Nonprofit executives say the reverse is also true: people who are paid work harder and seem more committed to their jobs.

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