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Retirement piggy bank | Source: iStock
Eighty is the new 65, at least when it comes to retirement. More than a third of
middle class Americans surveyed by
Wells Fargo
said they’d need to work until age 80 or beyond before they could
retire comfortably. For young workers, retirement after 70 may be the
norm. The average member of the class of 2015 will need to work until
age 75, an analysis by
financial website Nerdwallet found.
Some may end up working until they hit their eighth decade, which could
give them just a handful of years in retirement. (The average
23-year-old today can
expect to live into their early to mid-80s.)
Many Americans have come to accept the inevitability of a late
retirement. Since 1991, the number of people who expect to retire at or
before age 65 has fallen from 84% to 46%, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI). Twenty-five years ago, 9% of people expected to work past age 70. Today, 26% do.
Anticipating a retirement date in your 70s or 80s isn’t necessarily a
bad thing if you love your job. But for many, delayed retirement won’t
be a matter of choice. Millennials will have to stay in the workforce
longer because high student debt, rising rents, and a hesitancy to
invest will make it difficult for them to save enough money to quit
their jobs, according to NerdWallet. Many other workers find themselves
reaching 60 or 65 with paltry nest eggs and big expenses, like mortgage
payments or college for the kids, still hanging over their heads. Those
financial pressures leave many no choice but to stick it out at the
office for a few more years until they feel retirement is within reach.
Why Americans are delaying retirement
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Retirement ahead | Source: iStock
Who’s to blame for our ever-increasing retirement
age? A number of factors are at play. Pensions have largely disappeared,
leaving workers to figure out how to fund their retirements on their
own. Many people don’t have access to
retirement plans at work, which makes it harder to save.
Stagnant wages are also a problem for people who want to save. In
2013, middle-income workers were earning just 6% more than they did in
1976, an increase of less than 0.2% per year, according to the Economic Policy Institute.
For others, the very idea of retirement has changed. Rather than rounds
of golf and long RV trips, they might be open to the idea of a phased
retirement, or willing to put off retirement in exchange for better
work-life balance during their younger years.
Human error is also contributing to rising retirement ages. From not
saving enough to raiding retirement accounts too soon, it’s easy to make
mistakes that may force you to put off retirement until your 80s. Here
are three of the biggest.
1. You start saving too late
Procrastination is the enemy of success. If you wait until your 40s
or 50s to start saving for retirement, you’re going to find it much more
difficult to save enough money to maintain your current standard of
living after you quit working.
“Consistently saving from the start of one’s working life is the key to creating retirement savings,” Joe Ready, head of Wells Fargo Institutional Retirement and Trust, said.
Don’t believe us? Just take a look at this chart from J.P. Morgan Asset Management.
Consistently saving $10,000 a year from age 25 to 65 yields a nest egg
of $1.8 million, assuming a return of 6.5%. If you wait until 35 to
start saving the same amount, your portfolio will be worth almost $1
million less at retirement.
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Source: J.P. Morgan Asset Management
2. You borrow from your retirement account
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Broken piggy bank | Source: Thinkstock
Twenty percent of Americans admit to raiding their retirement account early, a 2014 Gallup poll found. Sixteen percent took out a 401(k) loan, and 9% made an early withdrawal. Doing either does huge damage to your retirement savings, as the chart below shows.
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Source: J.P. Morgan Asset Management
With steady contributions of 9% of your annual salary, you’d be on
track to have a retirement nest egg of $1.7 million at age 65. But once
you take two relatively small loans of $10,000 each, plus an early
withdrawal of another $10,000, your portfolio’s value falls to $1.2
million, a drop of 30%. When you tap your 401(k) early, you’ll probably
cut back on contributions as you pay back the loan, as well as lose out
on any future growth of the investments you sold, which causes you to
fall behind in your savings, financial advisor Ric Edelman explained to CNBC.
3. You don’t save enough
Saving something for retirement is better than saving nothing in
retirement. If you’re young and feeling other financial pressures, you
may start out by saving just 2% or 3% of your salary. That’s a good
start, but it’s a far cry from the 10% to 15% financial planners recommend
setting aside, even if your employer matches your contributions.
Gradually increasing your savings amount can make it more likely you’ll
retire at 65 rather than 80.
How much of a difference does aggressive saving really make? A
25-year-old man making $40,000 a year who saves 3% of his salary
annually has a 58% chance of not running out of money in retirement, according to EBRI research.
If he increases his savings rate to 6.4%, he has a 75% chance of not
going broke in retirement. And if he sets aside 14% of his salary, as
many financial experts would suggest, he has a 90% chance of meeting his
financial needs in retirement.
Culled from wallstreet
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