Personally, I retired at age-60 and I'm quite happy I did so. My health is good and I'm enjoying my life away from the issues and stress of airline work. Therefore, I would think those who were (and still are) part of the "get out of my seat crowd" have no issues with pilots such as me who retired "early." That fact notwithstanding, every pilot should have the right to work until they feel they should retire. In the years before the change in the rule, hundreds and hundreds of pilots in the 11th hour of their careers found themselves to be the victim of drastic changes in the long promised and legally contracted pensions. Some of these people lost everything through no fault of their own. These people were victims of the same problems that affect the younger pilots now. Yes, I'd like to see more of the public flying so the industry can hire more pilots. Yes, cut-throat Internet pricing is a problem that killing profits and causing drastic cost saving methods. Yes, I'd like to see the end of outsourcing and the many other problems that have ruined airline careers; but, forcing the senior pilots out at the top when they need to work just so the younger pilots can get on the bottom was not the way to improve the industry. The fact is that the industry is better off with a higher retirement age for pilots than a lower one.
I must ask this: Would the industry be better off with a retirement age of age-55, or how about age-50 or age-45? What is the ideal age for mandatory age?
Personally I would think the longer a person has the option of working, that's the best for everyone. While you may think you want to "retire" at age-55 or 60, and that is currently everyone's option, that fact is that when a person gets to that age they may NEED TO WORK longer for many reasons, primarily financial but also for other personal reasons too.