A Dozen Big Changes in Perceptions About Retirement

May 23, 2011 RSS Feed Print
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Middle-income baby boomers have spent the past few years battening down the hatches for futures they expect will be uncertain but turbulent. In the process, their definitions of what retirement looks like have changed dramatically. A new poll sponsored by Bankers Life and Casualty Co. provides a detailed look at the changing financial profile of people born between 1946 and 1964, with household incomes ranging from $25,000 to $75,000 a year.

[See 10 Essential Sources of Retirement Income.]

It's no secret that the middle class has been under enormous financial stress. The value of this study, "Middle-Income Boomers, Financial Security and the New Retirement," is in the detailed portrait it provides of specific boomer actions and attitudes. See how your own outlook compares with its findings.

Before the recession and market declines, Americans seemed to be on a debt-financed spending spree, often using their home equity as a piggy bank. No more. Since the downturn, middle-income boomers have sharply curtailed discretionary spending on most leisure-time items. Here are the percentages of respondents saying they are now spending less on:

Going out to restaurants: 63 percent

Vacations: 62 percent

Movies: 62 percent

Clothes and shoes: 60 percent

Gifts for birthdays and holidays: 58 percent

Electronics and tech gadgets: 56 percent

Hobbies: 55 percent

Cable television: 26 percent

Nearly 3 of every 4 boomers say they've been forced to rethink their retirement date. Of these, nearly 80 percent (that's more than half of all middle-income boomers) said they would delay retirement—by an average of five years—and 14 percent said they feel they can never retire. Retirement used to be linked with a person's age. "Today, more than ever, a new number has emerged in its place—the amount of one's personal savings," the study said. "On the new road to retirement, Americans can now retire only when they feel they can afford to do so."

[See Consumers Map Best Retirement Planning Moves.]

The survey found that middle-income boomers had increased their contributions in employer retirement programs but still felt they would come up short in having enough money to retire. "Uncovered healthcare expenses (80 percent), inflation (79 percent) and living longer than their money lasts (71 percent) are the top three financial concerns that middle-income boomers have about retirement."

Asked what they expected their retirements to be like, boomers projected huge differences between their experiences and their perceptions of how previous generations had fared in retirement. In financial terms, at least, the Silent Generation had nothing to squawk about because it retired with pensions and other sources of guaranteed income.

Here is how middle-income boomers feel about 15 expectations about retired life, including how they think their own outlooks differ from earlier generations of retirees. In a dozen instances, there were big differences between the two sets of perceptions.

[See 6 Ways to Plan for Your Later Years.]

 

Attribute My Retirement Previous Generations % Change
Keeping up with technology 77% 8% +69
Working 78% 16% +62
Staying physically fit/healthy living 81% 27% +54
Learning a new skill 60% 21% +39
Reinventing oneself 54% 18% +36
Going back to school 35% 19% +16
Starting or furthering one’s business 37% 22% +15
Volunteering 58% 58% 0
Spending time with family and friends 68% 70% -2
Travel 61% 67% -6
Pursuing traditional retirement hobbies 48% 74% -26
Being at home, watching TV, relaxing 48% 75% -27
Moving to a retirement community 24% 62% -38
Slowing down 35% 77% -42
Being taken care of by family 15% 69% -54

 

Twitter: @PhilMoeller

Corrected 5/23/11: A previous version of this story omitted several paragraphs and misidentified the chart. The story and chart have been updated.

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All the more reason to start now, building a business from home, with minimal investment and low overhead, that's portable no matter where you decide to move or travel, and can pay out Residual Income for years to come. We must increase our ability to control our lives - our futures, and stay healthy enough to enjoy them!

Joann Price of AZ 2:29PM May 24, 2011

The differences are even more marked for baby Boomers over age 50 who were hit hard by the Great Recession and do not have time to make up their losses. Most are either delaying retirement or planning to supplement retirement income with part-time or home-based work. See http://www.BabyBoomerLifeboat.com for more information.

Al Kernek of CA 11:02AM May 24, 2011

The Best Life

Philip Moeller, contributing editor for U.S. News Money, writes about achieving success and happiness in older age.

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