DrQ
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I read the article and wanted to post it too but figured the paywall wouldn’t allow most to read it without a WSJ subscription.
Unfortunately, this is very true and not for just the Young 60 year-old boomers. The smart ones knew they couldn’t rely on SS and pensions (that disappeared) and saved voraciously for retirement. Others were hit with generational bad luck of the financial crisis during their prime earning and saving years and couldn’t recover.
I retired last year at 65 while many of my older friends are still working. Some “friends” look at us and say “well, you have 2 pensions while some of us have none”. Yes, and we both worked our asses off to earn those during years we were raising our kids .
So many things changed during the span of the baby boomer generation making it more difficult for the later ones to retire comfortably. This dynamic could have far reaching effects on the government, the economy and future generations.
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The article I posted was referring to late boomer who got hit with a double whammy during their peak earning years: 2008 and then COVID.I suppose I'm one of the luckier "boomers" - no pension but invested early in real estate and the stock market -- and had a working spouse and inherited some $$
Baby Boomers’ Good Times Drive the Economy
https://www.wsj.com/us-news/baby-boomers-drive-economy-d4b72e40
The problem with boomers is that they changed the rules midway through the game. We went from having company pensions to 401k and managing your own accounts. Some companies funded their 401k accounts with their own stock, which turned out to be worthless.It is a pretty simple formula. Contribute enough to your 401K to get the maximum match from your company. Start early. Even a few thousand a year in your early 20s can turn into millions.
Those numbers are likely more accurate for younger Boomers and certainly for GenX'ers and Millennials though, since they don't have any pension type income sources, so nearly all income in retirement needs to be generated from savings as opposed to pensions which no longer exist for the most part. A good number of the older Boomers have pensions, but those of us in the younger generations (I'm a GenX'er) don't have that luxury. It's either we save for our retirement like mad, or we don't ever retire basically.The reality is people don't need as much as the experts think to retire. It seems the newest number the experts came up with is $1,460,000 to retire which is a nice number but an over estimate, imo.
Bill
Do we really need $1M in retirement savings? Not even close, one top economist says
A prominent economist argues that you can retire on savings much less than $1 million.www.usatoday.com
A majority, roughly 85%, said they were just fine: They were living comfortably, or at least “doing OK.”
Only 15% said they were struggling.
The finding matters, Biggs says, because most retirees have much less than $1 million in the bank. In the federal survey, the typical senior who reported a satisfactory retirement had $50,000 to $100,000 in savings.
Agree. I entered the workforce in 1988 (beginning of Gen X), and even then I remember thinking that I can't rely on SS when I retire, so I had plan to save myself. I never had a pension; it was all on me.Those who chose to ignore warning signs during their 'earning years', did so at their own peril.
The problem with boomers is that they changed the rules midway through the game. We went from having company pensions to 401k and managing your own accounts. Some companies funded their 401k accounts with their own stock, which turned out to be worthless.
Pensions had their own perils, but they were a more known entity.
Now, 401k's are more regulated and standardized but it was a rough transition.
Those numbers are likely more accurate for younger Boomers and certainly for GenX'ers and Millennials though, since they don't have any pension type income sources, so nearly all income in retirement needs to be generated from savings as opposed to pensions which no longer exist for the most part. A good number of the older Boomers have pensions, but those of us in the younger generations (I'm a GenX'er) don't have that luxury. It's either we save for our retirement like mad, or we don't ever retire basically.
Agree. I entered the workforce in 1988 (beginning of Gen X), and even then I remember thinking that I can't rely on SS when I retire, so I had plan to save myself. I never had a pension; it was all on me.
Kurt
The reality is people don't need as much as the experts think to retire. It seems the newest number the experts came up with is $1,460,000 to retire which is a nice number but an over estimate, imo.
Bill
Do we really need $1M in retirement savings? Not even close, one top economist says
A prominent economist argues that you can retire on savings much less than $1 million.www.usatoday.com
A majority, roughly 85%, said they were just fine: They were living comfortably, or at least “doing OK.”
Only 15% said they were struggling.
The finding matters, Biggs says, because most retirees have much less than $1 million in the bank. In the federal survey, the typical senior who reported a satisfactory retirement had $50,000 to $100,000 in savings.
Add to that, the move from "defined benefits" to "defined contributions" . . . people got lost in the shuffle and weren't prepared to make sound financial decisions, all the while financial advisors were collecting fees.The problem with boomers is that they changed the rules midway through the game. We went from having company pensions to 401k and managing your own accounts. Some companies funded their 401k accounts with their own stock, which turned out to be worthless.
Pensions had their own perils, but they were a more known entity.
Now, 401k's are more regulated and standardized but it was a rough transition.
Easy, I guess I'm not among the "many boomers" you refer to. If I don't drink fancy coffee, drive a nice vehicle and attend great entertainment events, my Millennial kids will!Do gen x er's save or spend ? The younger people I know spend a lot on things like coffee, vehicles and entertainment. Many boomers are content with regular drip coffee, an old vehicle and cheap entertainment.
Bill
Do gen x er's save or spend ? The younger people I know spend a lot on things like coffee, vehicles and entertainment. Many boomers are content with regular drip coffee, an old vehicle and cheap entertainment.
Bill
In the end, it's about the question - Capital versus Cashflow. For retirement, substituting capital for cashflow OUT is the better course (up to a point). On the other hand you have the need of cashflow IN when retired, as you have no other way of earning cashflow.Do gen x er's save or spend ? The younger people I know spend a lot on things like coffee, vehicles and entertainment. Many boomers are content with regular drip coffee, an old vehicle and cheap entertainment.
Bill