People say getting old isn’t for the faint of heart. Well, neither is retirement—financially speaking, anyway.
Saving is hard. Few jobs offer traditional pensions anymore. A 401(k) puts the burden of financial management largely on the employee. And Social Security is a labyrinth of complex regulations and difficult calculations, administered by a seemingly indifferent bureaucracy.
Retirees and those getting ready to retire must navigate all of this at a time of life when they may not be at their strongest, physically, mentally, or emotionally. But they need to be. As the last of the 73 million baby boomers turn 65 in the next seven years, challenges to the system will only increase.
“You’re probably going to have an increase in the poverty rate,” says retirement planning evangelist Laurence Kotlikoff, William Fairfield Warren Professor of Economics in the Boston University College of Arts & Sciences. “People are retiring, some quite early, and retiring with very little. Baby boomers just don’t have enough savings. And Social Security is just not gonna be that big for lots of people.”
Twenty-seven percent of adults in 2021 considered themselves to be retired, even though some were still working in some capacity, according to the Federal Reserve. Some 92 percent of retirees over the age of 65 collected Social Security, and two-thirds drew from retirement accounts or pensions.
A look at the stats covering the number of older people living in poverty seems to provide good news, having declined from one in three people in the 1960s to only about 10 percent of older people today. Still too many, but a big improvement.
But within that picture is a cautionary tale, says Deborah Carr, a CAS professor of sociology and director of the Center for Innovation in Social Science.
“If you look at just that 10 percent, 3 percent of white married men live in poverty, but over a third of women of color living on their own are in poverty,” Carr says. “So, 10 percent is a good news story overall, but we want to recall that there are some deep pockets of poverty among older people.”
Of course, millions of Americans retire just fine, but BU researchers are working to identify the challenges that keep many others from fully enjoying what are supposed to be their golden years.