iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Retirement Crisis: Baby Boomers Near 65 With Retirements In Jeopardy

Retirement Crisis

DAVE CARPENTER   12/27/10 09:33 PM ET   AP

CHICAGO — Through a combination of procrastination and bad timing, many baby boomers are facing a personal finance disaster just as they're hoping to retire. Starting in January, more than 10,000 baby boomers a day will turn 65, a pattern that will continue for the next 19 years.

The boomers, who in their youth revolutionized everything from music to race relations, are set to redefine retirement. But a generation that made its mark in the tumultuous 1960s now faces a crisis as it hits its own mid-60s.

"The situation is extremely serious because baby boomers have not saved very effectively for retirement and are still retiring too early," says Olivia Mitchell, director of the Boettner Center for Pensions and Retirement Research at the University of Pennsylvania.

There are several reasons to be concerned:

_ The traditional pension plan is disappearing. In 1980, some 39 percent of private-sector workers had a pension that guaranteed a steady payout during retirement. Today that number stands closer to 15 percent, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute in Washington, D.C.

_ Reliance on stocks in retirement plans is greater than ever; 42 percent of those workers now have 401(k)s. But the past decade has been a lost one for stocks, with the Standard & Poor's 500 index posting total returns of just 4 percent since the beginning of 2000.

_ Many retirees banked on their homes as their retirement fund. But the crash in housing prices has slashed almost a third of a typical home's value. Now 22 percent of homeowners, or nearly 11 million people, owe more on their mortgage than their home is worth. Many are boomers.

Michael Vanatta, 61, of Vero Beach, Fla., is paying the price for being a boomer who enjoyed life without saving for the future. He put a daughter through college, but he also spent plenty of money on indulgences like dining out and the latest electronic gadgets.

Vanatta was laid off last January from his $100,000-a-year job as a sales executive for a turf company. And with savings of just $5,000, he's on a budget for the first time. In April, he will start taking Social Security at age 62.

"If I'd been smarter and planned and had the bucks, I'd wait until 70," says Vanatta, who is divorced and rents an apartment. "It's my fault. For years I was making plenty of money and spending plenty of money."

Vanatta is in the majority. Some 51 percent of early boomer households, headed by those ages 55 to 64, face a retirement with lower living standards, according to a 2009 study by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

Too many boomers have ignored or underestimated the worsening outlook for their finances, says Jean Setzfand, director of financial security for AARP, the group that represents Americans over age 50. By far the greatest shortcoming has been a failure to save. The personal savings rate – the amount of disposable income unspent – averaged close to 10 percent in the 1970s and `80s. By late 2007, the rate had sunk to negative 1 percent.

The recession has helped improve the savings rate – it's now back above 5 percent. Yet typical boomers are still woefully short on retirement savings. Even those in their 50s and 60s with a 401(k) for at least six years had an average balance of less than $150,000 at the end of 2009, according to the EBRI.

Signs of coming trouble are visible on several other fronts, too:

_ Mortgage Debt. Nearly two in three people age 55 to 64 had a mortgage in 2007, with a median debt of $85,000.

_ Social Security. Nearly 3 out of 4 people file to claim Social Security benefits as soon as they're eligible at age 62. That locks them in at a much lower amount than they would get if they waited.

The monthly checks are about 25 percent less if you retire at 62 instead of full retirement age, which is 66 for those born from 1943 to 1954. If you wait until 70, your check can be 75 to 80 percent more than at 62. So, a boomer who claimed a $1,200 monthly benefit in 2008 at age 62 could have received about $2,000 by holding off until 70.

_ Medical Costs. Health care expenses are soaring, and the availability of retiree benefits is declining.

"People cannot fathom how much money will be needed to simply cover out-of-pocket medical care costs," says Mitchell of the University of Pennsylvania.

A 55-year-old man with typical drug expenses needs to have about $187,000 just to cover future medical costs. That's if he wants to be 90 percent certain to have enough money to supplement Medicare coverage in retirement, the EBRI said. Because of greater longevity, a 65-year-old woman would need even more to cover her health insurance premiums and out-of-pocket health expenses: an estimated $213,000.

_ Employment. Boomers both need and want to work longer than previous generations. But unemployment is near 10 percent, and many have lost their jobs.

The average unemployment period for those 55 and older was 45 weeks in November. That's 12 weeks longer than for younger job-seekers. It's also more than double the 20-week period this group faced at the beginning of the recession in December 2007.

If financial neglect turns out to be many boomers' undoing, challenging circumstances are stymieing others.

Linda Reaves of Silver Spring, Md., never had much opportunity to save as a single mother raising two sons and a daughter. After holding a variety of positions over the years – hotel office manager, research analyst for a mortgage company, hospital mental health counselor – she was still living paycheck to paycheck. Then she was laid off in 2007 at the age of 57.

She entered a training program to learn new skills, but all she has found since is a string of temporary jobs. In her daily quest for clerical or administrative work, she competes against much younger applicants.

Reaves, who turns 60 this month, plans to work until she's at least 70 and then wants to travel, even if she doesn't know where the money will come from.

"I just keep going. I don't really worry about it," she says.

Add this all up, and there's a "slow-burning" retirement crisis for boomers, says Anthony Webb, a research economist at the Center for Retirement Research.

"If you have a crisis where the adverse consequences are immediately clear, then people understand that they have to do something," Webb says. "When the consequences will be felt 20 or 30 years in the future, the temptation is that we kick the can down the road."

As a result, he believes many won't change their behavior.

For less affluent boomers, it won't take that long to feel the pain of poor planning. Concerns about financial trouble will hang over many of those 65th birthday celebrations in 2011.

Many seem to view their plight through rose-colored granny glasses. An AARP survey last month of boomers turning 65 next year found that they worry no more about money than they did at age 60 – before the recession or the collapse of home prices. But in an acknowledgement of reality, 40 percent said they plan to work "until I drop."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST BUSINESS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Money newsletter!
CHICAGO — Through a combination of procrastination and bad timing, many baby boomers are facing a personal finance disaster just as they're hoping to retire. Starting in January, more than 10,000 ba...
CHICAGO — Through a combination of procrastination and bad timing, many baby boomers are facing a personal finance disaster just as they're hoping to retire. Starting in January, more than 10,000 ba...
Filed by Adam J. Rose  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 1,024
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Highlights
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (14 total)
12:35 PM on 01/16/2011
It's more important than ever to become more agressive with building your retirement nest egg: http://www.entrustadministration.com/alternative-investments/morechoices/
photo
KAL-EL
Every time I fill out my bio I get banned.
05:23 PM on 12/30/2010
It's almost unbelievable that otherwise rational people don't see this crisis from either perspective of society at large or on a personal basis.
11:24 AM on 12/30/2010
This is a crisis of the highest proportions and we have not yet begun to feel the economic impacts.
My blog, America's Retirement Crisis, attempts to highlight these issues.

http://www.wealthvest.com/blog/wade-dokken/americas-retirement-crisis-a-concise-guide-the-week/

Wade Dokken
photo
darter22
Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes.
08:59 AM on 12/30/2010
The Boomer suicide rate will skyrocket over the next few years as many of them recognize the hopelessness of their situation.
pup sydney
needs of regular folks, Italy; cancer;
07:40 AM on 12/30/2010
America never ever planned for anything in the last 7 decades unless corporations gained from it. Common good? Naaaah unless there is money for big business!
Even obamacare exists only because insurances wrote it. Bush gave Medicare to corporations. Reagan gave our pension to mutual funds and therefore wall street. Soon they will make money out of our corpses too when we will all croak at work and they will claim ownership of our bodies ( if is good for business everybody will agree to it, just watch).......
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StopAmericanPlutocracy
Why do the wealthy refuse to pay a living wage?
11:24 AM on 12/30/2010
You get it. FF.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaliforniaFree
05:35 AM on 12/30/2010
“The best option you can remedy is to think positive even if reality is that the economy is going the opposite direction.­­...

The fact remains that the next 2 years are going to be rocky because it's what we are reaping from the past....."

I totally recommend everyone to keep on some reserves on food, water and clothing in case of any emergency.­.....

You can insult, or call me all the names in the book but the fact remains that many foreign countries in the world are hoping that the United States collapses or goes through a major shift in power.....­.

Even Yahoo front page says that the Sun is going through a major CYCLE that will affect Earth....”

http://new­s.yahoo.co­m/s/afp/sc­iencespace­suntelecom­s#mwpphu-p­ost-form

It's a probabilit­y that the earth will go through a polar shift
http://inf­o.2012pro.­com/articl­es/art_004­_polarshif­tfirststep­s.htm”

It's a good idea to read this survival preparedness book
http://www.survivalcenter.com/Survival_Center_BP09.pdf
02:24 AM on 12/30/2010
say what you will about boomers - at least they hit the streets and protested for civil rights, ending the vietnam war, womens rights, and many other things

the younger ones these days just want to sit in front of the x box and text each other ad infinitum, while their brethren get sent to war, get ripped off financially by shady student loan administrators, and their planet is environmentally destroyed.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
12:44 AM on 12/30/2010
No one out of work and over fifty ever expects to make the kind of money their skills made them before the crash.  A single-payer health care system might have incentived business to utilized the skill and experience of older workers, but all these people are out on an ice-berg now.  What a waste of talent. 
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:27 PM on 12/29/2010
Important Re post ....

utilitopia 4 hours ago (7:20 PM)
17 Fans
Become a fan
Divide-and -conquer generation al warfare will be employed by the privileged class to keep the rabble at their proper station: expendable beasts of burden who exist for the benefit of the wealthy.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
12:38 AM on 12/30/2010
You know it's true. 
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:19 PM on 12/29/2010
This is what makes UNIONS bad .........

" The traditional pension plan is disappearing. In 1980, some 39 percent of private-sector workers had a pension that guaranteed a steady payout during retirement. Today that number stands closer to 15 percent, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute in Washington, D.C. "

You usually got a traditional pension plan by belonging to a union . HOW IS THAT BAD ??
08:27 PM on 12/29/2010
I would have laughed if anyone told me the struggle I would face 3 years ago. Since then, my house value has plummeted, and continues to decline. All the improvements I invested using cash all the way is gone, and I will never see that money again. I live in CA, and the county has decided to let our streets revert to dirt, they cannot afford to pave them. They can afford to give the entire legislature new high end vehicles, but cannot afford to keep roads working or help education. Our education system used to be #1 in the country, today it is 49.
I have no intention of giving up, will continue to move ahead. The income in my profession has dropped 66% (assuming anyone were hiring) in the last 10 years. I used to make good money, now it is difficult to earn a decent living.


The party is over, and I guess we will all keep moving forward, there is no other alternative. Take life as we see it, hang on to what is important, and let go of the rest. Separating the two can be difficult at times.
06:49 AM on 12/30/2010
There are many who want privatized schools. Schools and our Social Security are both set up to fail by those who were supposed to be 'watching the store'. There are many who belong in jail.
08:00 PM on 12/29/2010
Look at all the rats scurrying to eat each other as the grain runs out. Gosh, I love humans.
photo
moose and squirrel
Very soon we would both be completely twisted...
07:02 PM on 12/29/2010
Most Americans need to come to terms with the fact that for them, there is no such thing as retirement.
12:03 PM on 12/29/2010
The younger generations are confusing all boomers with all those who are wealthy and the corporations and those in the higher up government.

Most of us are like the younger generations. In fact some boomers are in their early forties. Most boomers are still working. They can't retire until they are 65 because that is when Medicare starts. If they would lower the Medicare age to 62 that would open a lot of jobs.

Some boomers say they will never get to retire because they can't afford it.

I hope the generations x and y will look with an open mind and see who the real culprits are.
It is the government, the corporations and many of the wealthy who are sending jobs overseas,
then overcharging us for what we have to have.

They would love it if the younger generations turned against the boomer generations. One reason is that would deflect the blame from themselves.
07:20 PM on 12/29/2010
Divide-and-conquer generational warfare will be employed by the privileged class to keep the rabble at their proper station: expendable beasts of burden who exist for the benefit of the wealthy.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
12:39 AM on 12/30/2010
You know it. 
photo
enterhere
Held hostage by Domestic Terrorists...Republicans.
11:07 AM on 12/29/2010
Some boomers did do all the right things in anticipation of retirement but the rug was pulled out from under them by greedy folk. People had 401(k) accounts that they put the max into and never took anything out. One day they wake up and much of the value gone. Bought houses, never borrowed against them, paid them way down or off. One day they wake up and much of the value gone. Worked for 30 or so years for the same company climbing that ladder. One day they wake up and that job is gone to China or India. Those boomers did everything right but were wronged by the greedy. But that's OK because those greedy folk, they will never have to worry about their own retirement, they took many others' retirement away.
01:40 PM on 12/29/2010
Does not make it any easier, but the reality of economic cycles dictates that what exists in one country today will shift somewhere else tomorrow. Britain was an economic powerhouse for more years than the U.S and prior to Britain there were cycles that took power and wealth through many other economies. Today we may need to encourage our children to look overseas for their own futures. Not easy to take, but part of a larger necessity that will continue to shift power bases over time.
09:57 PM on 12/29/2010
Even in Britain's hey day, most Brits` had very low living standards. Many of them were poorly paid cooks, butlers, carriage drivers, parlor maids etc working for pennies an hour and room and board. Is it surprising then that many working class young people moved to "the colonies" i.e. Canada, Australia, South Africa? The US is being knocked off its perch by its own ineptitude.
03:23 PM on 12/29/2010
Wrong. Boomers should not have lost much money if any at all from the stock market tanking. The older you get, the more conservative your investment approach is supposed to get. This is investing advice everyone knows and the only reason it wasn't heeded was because of greed. Home prices falling just sucks for boomers, but homes shouldn't be used as an investment anyway so the point is moot.
06:54 AM on 12/30/2010
They were harped at constantly to invest in the market. It was going up until it fell. They were told they had to have $250,000 to pay medical costs when they retired.

A better question to ask is, "Why are medical costs so high in this country?". They are twice as high here as they are in any country.