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U.S. Job Tenure Ticks Up, But Still Short

Americans’ job tenure increased slightly in 2012, but the average stay in a job is still shorter than many assume. The median length of time on the job for American workers in 2012 was just 5.4 years, according to new research from EBRI. Among the report’s findings:

• The median tenure for male wage and salary workers was lower in 2012 at 5.5 years, compared with 5.9 years in 1983. In contrast, the median tenure for female wage and salary workers increased from 4.2 years in 1983 to 5.4 years in 2012. Consequently, the long-term increase in the median tenure of female workers more than offsets the decline in the median tenure of male workers, leaving the overall level slightly higher over the long term.

• Even among older male workers (ages 55–64), who experienced the largest change in their median tenure, the median tenure fell from a level that would not normally be considered a career — 14.7 years in 1963 — to 10.7 years in 2012.

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