Baby BoomOr
Bust?
They
grew up in prosperous times and lived life to the
hilt...
but have baby boomers saved enough for retirement?
In
the eighteen years between 1946 and 1964, over 78
million babies were born in the United States. World
War II had been good for the American economy, pulling
it out of the Great Depression for good. During the
fabulous 50s, unprecedented industrial
growth provided steady employment and rising incomes.
The four-child family became the ideal, along with
a house in the suburbs, two cars in the driveway,
and that wonderful new invention, the television,
in the living room. One-income families were the normand
for the middle class at least, one paycheck was enough
to supply families with an increasing number of luxuries
and new experiences.
While
many boomers have invested wisely for retirement,
the majority have just not saved enough. There have
been incredible social and economic changes since
the 1950s, when boomers grew up with an innocent confidence
that life could only get better. Unlike their fathers,
who were likely to stay with one company and draw
a sizable pension, many boomers have job-hoppedsometimes
out of boredom or a desire to find work that would
make them happy, and sometimes because of mergers,
layoffs, outsourcing, and early-retirement buyouts.
Skyrocketing
housing, education, and healthcare costs have depleted
retirement nest eggs as boomers have found themselves
sandwiched between college expenses for their children
and care for their elderly parents. The increased
frequency of divorce has also left many boomers with
much less in their IRAs and 401Ks than they thought
they would have.
Then there are those who have put aside nothing at
all. Perhaps they followed the advice in the popular
70s song Cast Your Fate to the Wind. Or
perhaps they lived paycheck to paycheck and simply
never had anything to save.
Financing
Retirement: How Much Will You Need?
In
2008, the oldest of those 78 million boomers will
turn 62 and will qualify for reduced-rate social security
payments. In the decades that follow, more and more
will qualify. As most people know, social security
replaces only about 40% of pre-retirement income.
Investment advisors suggest that retirees will need
60-80% of their pre-retirement income in order to
maintain a comparable lifestyle. But that assumes
that their expenses will decreasethat retirees
will simply put themselves on austerity budgets and
make up the shortfall. Unfortunately, even if they
want to be more frugal, it wont be easy. Supplemental
Medicare policies and long-term care insurance are
new expenses retirees must absorb, and property taxes,
home and auto insurance, energy costs, and food expenses
will all continue to rise.
The
Worst That Could Happen...
Boomers biggest fear is that a healthcare crisis
will use up funds theyve set aside for retirement.
Medical advances allow people to live much longer
than in the past, but their quality of life is often
not the best, and spending for prescriptions that
prolong life is through the ceiling. Boomers are worried
about living out their final years in an unpleasant
but expensive nursing home, or having to ask their
children for help. This fear is another factor that
fuels the desire to accumulate just a little bit more
money and take less from retirement nest eggs so theyll
be able to grow and the funds will be available when
work is no longer an option.
How
will boomers find needed funds in retirement?
An
Associated Press survey reported that the majority
of boomers hope to retire from their current jobs
at around age 63. However, 66 percent anticipate they
will work for pay after retiring. Twenty-seven percent
will continue to work out of financial necessity,
43 percent because they cant picture sitting
around doing nothing, and 19 percent so that
they will have money available for extras they could
not afford on their retirement income.
The
majority of boomers foresee neither full-time leisure
nor full-time retirement, but a combination of both.
With 30 years of retirement a real possibility, they
are looking for challenges, not rocking chairs. Some
plan to launch new careers or use their skills as
volunteers. Others say they will go back to school,
start their own businesses, or try to turn a profit
from a hobby.
Are You a Wealth Builderor
Stretched and Stressed?
In
The New Retirement Survey, Harris Interactive®
and Age Wave questioned a diverse population and identified
five different types of soon-to-be retiring boomers:
the "Empowered Trailblazers," the "Wealth-Builders,"
the "Leisure Lifers," the "Anxious
Idealists" and the "Stretched and Stressed."
- About
18% were Empowered Trailblazers, people
who look forward to retirement because they see
it as a progression to another phase of life.
About 90% in this group plan to work some after
retirement, but they will also be busy with travel,
volunteering, taking or teaching classes, and
generally enjoying anything new that comes along.
- Wealth
Builders (20%) are looking for more financial
security for themselves and their families, and
money is the main reason 79% will continue to
work after official retirement.
- Anxious
Idealists (13%) worry that they do not have
enough money to retire, especially since they
want to leave an inheritance for their children
and a legacy to charitable organizations.
- Leisure
Lifers (13%) just want to relax. Theyre
sick of work, probably never liked their jobs,
and definitely dont want to work after retirement.
They had low income levels and did not save enough,
but they figure someone will do something
to help them if they get into trouble.
- The Stretched
and Stressed (18%) are well aware that they
have not saved enough for retirement. They will
work because they have to, but they dont
look forward to it. This group is the least optimistic.
You
have an 82% chance of identifying with a group that
feels it needs more money for retirement. With the
economy in constant fluctuation and costs of necessities
rising steadily, its no wonder that most people
fall into the I need more money category.
Peace of mind means knowing not merely that you will
somehow be able to survive, but that youll have
the funds to allow you to enjoy the happy retirement
envisioned by the Empowered Trailblazers.
YOU
Control Your Future.
Fortunately,
no matter how old you are right now, it is very possible
to become a Wealth Builder. This doesnt
mean you have to become a workaholic or even keep
working full time. Instead, you can build an income
generator that will provide funds for you to invest
now and to fund your retirement for many years into
the future. And you can do it in the privacy and comfort
of your own home, or even from your RV or vacation
hotel. As long as you have Internet access and a telephone,
you can build a successful business that will quickly
transport you from a state of anxiety and pessimism
about retirement to one of financial confidence and
securityready to enjoy the rest of your life
in a style you may never have imagined possible.
Is there still time? Absolutely. Obviously, the
sooner you get started, the better.
A
team of skilled business professionals is ready to
take you through the steps of building a home business
that can free you from worrying about the future.
If you are ready to take control and secure your financial
future, youve come to the right place.
Simply
fill out the form below for additional information.