Americans setting up for retirement failure, surveys show

By Steven A. Morelli Americans are setting themselves up for less-than-golden years if the economy slides into recession, according to findings from a few surveys. As people adjust to higher inflation and prepare for difficult times,

Americans setting up for retirement failure, surveys show


By Steven A. Morelli

Americans are setting themselves up for less-than-golden years if the economy slides into recession, according to findings from a few surveys.

As people adjust to higher inflation and prepare for difficult times, more of them are putting off retirement and reducing retirement savings, thinking they will work into the customary retirement years.

A Nationwide Retirement Institute study found that 40% of workers plan to postpone retirement because of increasing costs of living, double the number of people saying so a year ago. Fewer people have confidence in their retirement plan, with 58% feeling confident vs. 72% last year.

Preparedness for retirement.

A majority of employees (66%) said inflation is their top retirement concern. Nearly three-quarters of workers said they expect to retire later because they don’t have enough money saved.

Reasons expecting to retire later than planned.

Another survey showed that inflation is causing a majority of Americans (54%) to reduce or stop their retirement savings. According to the Allianz Life Q3 Quarterly Market Perceptions Study, most respondents (80%) said they were worried about inflation having a negative impact on their income’s purchasing power.

The reduction in retirement savings is hitting younger generations, setting themselves up for difficulties later. Millennials were the most likely to say they have stopped or reduced retirement savings due to inflation (65%), with 40% of boomers and 59% of Gen Xers saying so.

Even if they have not cut their savings, Americans are worried inflation will damage their retirement plans, with Gen Xers the most anxious at 80%, while 76% of millennials and 73% of boomers agreed.

It isn’t just inflation they are worried about, with 62% concerned that a major recession is right around the corner.

Able to work?

Postponing retirement would seem to be a natural consequence of the anxiety around savings and income. But people are probably overestimating their ability to remain at work.

Even before the COVID shutdown, people in their 50s were being forced out of their long-term jobs, with 56% leaving involuntarily, according to a ProPublica/Urban Institute study.

Propublica job loss statistics.

“This isn’t how most people think they’re going to finish out their work lives,” said Richard Johnson, an Urban Institute economist. “For the majority of older Americans, working after 50 is considerably riskier and more turbulent than we previously thought.”

Another meta-analysis also found that half of the people who retired between 55 and 64 did so involuntarily, according to the Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis. This is particularly true for workers in physically demanding jobs – a key reason why more Black and Hispanic people are forced into early retirement.

Job loss statistics.

Less health, more demands

recent book from two researchers showed that more than half of Americans don’t work consistently through their 50s, even before they reach their more challenging years.

“Many people won’t be able to work even into their 60s, never mind through them,” according to one of the editors, Lisa Berkman of Harvard’s Center for Population and Development Studies.

The book, Overtime: America’s Aging Workforce and the Future of Working Longer, listed three reasons for early retirement, according to a Forbes article on the research.

Health is the top reason, even though people are living longer. They aren’t necessarily living healthier.

“Major sections of the cohorts turning 40 or 50 now – especially groups with lower levels of education or income — are actually in worse health than their counterparts who were born two or three decades earlier were when they were in their 40s and 50s,” according to the book.

Care is another primary reason, particularly women. If people are out of work caring for their parents in their 50s, it can affect the rest of their working lives. Workplaces are no better are providing flexibility for older employees to care for their relatives any more than they are for younger people caring for their children.
Work itself drains employees. The physical and mental stress are grinding employees as they deal with the realities of aging.

The book also has some sobering news for people in their 50s who tried retirement during COVID – if they want to return to work, it’s tough to get back to the level of career that they left. Only one in 10 ever earn as much again.

Steven A. Morelli is a contributing editor for InsuranceNewsNet. He has more than 25 years of experience as a reporter and editor for newspapers and magazines. He was also vice president of communications for an insurance agents’ association. Steve can be reached at stevenamorelli@gmail.com.

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