New Study Suggests That Few Are Ready to Retire

According to a new study, retiring at age 67 may not be in the cards for many individuals, partly by choice. Tracking desires and expectations of American workers, a newly created Sun Life Financial UnretirementSM Index suggests that 8 out of 10 persons want to continue working as a way to "stay mentally engaged." Other results are not surprising. Fewer than half of the respondents feel they can afford to stop working. One-third of survey-takers worry about the financial viability of Social Security. One coping mechanism, cited by 82 percent of the sample group, is to reduce their spending with about two-thirds of respondents saying they will lower their debt as a way to "improve retirement prospects" For more information about this attitudinal metric, click here.

Nice as it is to have choices about when to retire, the recent market rout makes it difficult at best for some to consider anything else but continued employment (assuming no layoffs by their employer). Yahoo! News references Congressional research that "Americans' retirement plans have lost as much as $2 trillion in the past 15 months." Making matters worse, economic conditions that result in lower wages make it difficult for some to keep saving for retirement, if they did so in the first place. Click to read "Retirement accounts have lost $2 trillion" by Julie Hirschfeld Davis, October 7, 2008.

In an interview with PBS, Peter Orszag, Director of the Congressional Budget Office, explains that "two-thirds of the assets that are in 401(k) plans are in stocks," exposing plan participants to fallout, just like institutional investors. He adds that economic problems are already impacting defined benefit plans. As the value of their asset portfolio drops, companies will need to "put in more money, and that will come out of either their shareholders, their workers, or they'll try to pass it along to their consumers." Click to read "Market Turmoil Puts Squeeze on Retirement Savings," October 9, 2008.

This blog has covered changing demographics and retirement angst for months. One can only hope that the current market malaise is short-lived and that individual savings goes up (or at least excess leverage goes down), to the extent that individuals can afford to put monies aside for post-employment consumption.

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