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Dan Doonan

Executive Director

With more than 25 years of experience, Dan is a leading expert on retirement matters.

Dan Doonan is the executive director of the National Institute on Retirement Security. With the Board of Directors, Doonan leads the organization’s strategic planning, retirement research and education initiatives.

Doonan has more than 25 years of experience working on retirement issues from different vantage points including an analyst, consultant, trainer and even a plan trustee. In these various roles, the consistent theme has been his belief that Americans have a shared interest in creating and maintaining a resilient retirement infrastructure that provides adequate financial support in an efficient manner.

Under his leadership, NIRS membership has increased by 25 percent and he has further strengthened the organization’s reputation as a trusted source of reliable retirement data and information. At NIRS, Doonan has authored or co-authored more than 30 reports on a wide range of retirement topics and testified before various state and federal legislative bodies, including the U.S Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. Doonan serves as a frequent conference speaker and is regularly cited in the news media on a broad range of retirement policy issues.

Prior to NIRS, Doonan served as a senior pension specialist with the National Education Association. There he co-authored Characteristics of Large Public Education Pension Plans, a detailed report this is considered to be a definitive resource of information about large public education retirement plans. Doonan began his career at the Department of Labor as a mathematical statistician. He then spent seven years performing actuarial analysis with Buck Consultants in their retirement practice. His experience also includes positions as a research director and labor economist.

Doonan holds a B.S. in Mathematics from Elizabethtown College, and he is a member of the National Academy of Social Insurance.

Recent Research

Quantifying the Economic Impact of Social Security Benefit Spending
A Social Security card in between cash bills.
  • Fact Sheets
  • Social Security
  • Quantifying the Economic Impact of Social Security Benefit Spending

    New research from the National Institute on Retirement Security finds that Social Security benefits play a powerful role in supporting the U.S. economy, generating $2.6 trillion in total economic output and supporting more than 12 million American jobs in 2023.

    Oct 30, 2025

    Debunking the Job-Hopping Myth: A Data-Driven Look at Tenure and Turnover Among Younger Workers
    Business team at morning briefing in the office
  • Issue Brief
  • Generations
  • Debunking the Job-Hopping Myth: A Data-Driven Look at Tenure and Turnover Among Younger Workers

    Contrary to popular belief that Millennials and Generation Z employees are constantly switching jobs, new research from the National Institute on Retirement Security finds that younger workers today show job retention patterns that closely mirror previous generations at the same stage of their careers.

    Sep 2, 2025

    Pensionomics 2025: Measuring the Economic Impact of Defined Benefit Pension Expenditures
    Close-up on a customer making a contactless payment at the supermarket

    Pensionomics 2025: Measuring the Economic Impact of Defined Benefit Pension Expenditures

    Pensionomics 2025: Measuring the Economic Impact of Defined Benefit Pension Expenditures finds pending powered by U.S. private and public sector defined benefit pensions contributed significantly to the economy. In 2022, retiree spending of public and private sector pension benefits generated $1.5 trillion in total economic output, supporting 7.1 million jobs across the nation.

    Jan 5, 2025

    Public Retirement System State Fact Sheets
    A map of the contiguous 48 U.S. states
  • Fact Sheets
  • Pensions
  • Public Retirement System State Fact Sheets

    In partnership with AARP and NRTA, NIRS has developed a series of state-by-state infographic fact sheets regarding the public employee and teacher retirement systems across the country. These fact sheets present a snapshot of these retirement systems along with key data from NIRS research and other sources.

    Jan 1, 2025

    Recent Forbes Columns

    A Birthday Gift for Social Security: Action Now Will Protect Benefits for the Next 90 Years
    Flag flies in front of Capitol in DC with cash and social security card to illustrate funding issues for retirement
  • In the News
  • Social Security
  • A Birthday Gift for Social Security: Action Now Will Protect Benefits for the Next 90 Years

    Happy birthday, Social Security! President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act into law on August 14, 1935, establishing a program that would grow over 90 years to become the foundation of retirement security in the United States. As we celebrate the remarkable accomplishments of Social Security during this anniversary month, it’s also important […]

    Aug 14, 2025

    Let’s Let Everyone Save for Retirement
    Social Security Cards for identification and retirement USA zoom motion blur

    Let’s Let Everyone Save for Retirement

    U.S. public policy typically encourages saving. Our retirement system has undergone a major transformation over the past four decades, shifting workers to an individual savings-based system. Public policy supports saving for college costs, health costs, and emergencies, so it seems odd when a specific group of Americans is denied the ability to save, but that […]

    Jun 9, 2025

    The Unsung Economic Engine: Retiree Pension Spending
    woman spending money at store

    The Unsung Economic Engine: Retiree Pension Spending

    In a new Forbes column NIRS Executive Director Dan Doonan writes that pension income is so much more than just income for retirees – it’s also a reliable economic engine that impacts virtually every community across the U.S. When pension income lands in a retiree’s bank account, that money doesn’t just sit in an account. […]

    Mar 3, 2025