World News – As I sit here in Costa Rica I am urged over and over again by friends and family to return to the USA and enter corporate America. Although I may never make a millions of dollars on the beach in Costa Rica I will also not be caught up in a society where many people think they are going to work until they die.
You’ve heard the story about America’s retirement crisis.
Young people don’t save enough. Older people have to work longer. Public pension benefits are always on the verge of being slashed, and Social Security’s future is anyone’s guess.
And now it has come to this: In its annual retirement study of middle-income Americans (income of $25,000 to $100,000), Wells Fargo asked participants if they expect to work until they die.
“This is the first time we asked if people thought they would work until they die or become too sick,” said Laurie Nordquist, head of Wells Fargo Institutional Retirement and Trust. Thirty-seven percent of middle-income Americans surveyed by Wells Fargo said they have that expectation.
Wells included the question based on a larger trend exposed when participants have been asked how many expect to work until they are at least 80. That number was at 34 percent in this year’s survey, a significant rise from 25 percent two years ago. It’s been on a steady rise, too, up from 30 percent in 2012. The new figure translates to just under two in five Americans who believe they will never be able to retire.
If 80 is the new 60, it’s looking like six feet under is the new 65 for a significant percentage of Americans.
The underlying trends in Wells’ survey, to be released Wednesday, are just as distressing, if not surprising.
“What we heard is that paying day-to-day bills trumps planning for retirement,” Nordquist said. “Day-to-day bills (are) really overwhelming them.”
Fifty-nine percent said their top financial concern is everyday bills, and 42 percent told Wells that it is not possible to both pay them and save for retirement.
“As much as we read about the economy turning around, people in middle-class America are not feeling it yet,” Nordquist said.
Even for those with assets to invest for retirement, lack of a plan and lack of confidence in the stock market hold them back from building a nest egg.
Only 30 percent have a retirement plan. The benefit of having a strategy is huge: Wells Fargo found that those with a plan have saved three times as much toward their retirement goal as those without one.
“That’s really amazing, and it makes a really big difference, whether your income is $25,000 or $100,000,” Nordquist said. “The plan doesn’t need to be elaborate.”
Yet the survey found that 75 percent of middle-income Americans said they are not confident that the stock market is a good place to save for retirement. That finding holds true for both young and old.
In fact, respondents in their 20s are the least sure, with 80 percent saying they are not confident about investing in the market.
“They have the long runway and should be taking advantage of appreciation,” Nordquist said. Yet when Wells Fargo asked what they would do if given $5,000 to invest, most said they would put it in a savings account.
One of the survey’s more encouraging findings was that only 7 percent of Americans “strongly agree” that gambling in Las Vegas is as good an idea as investing in the stock market, but that’s little solace (and 27 percent of Americans surveyed generally agreed with the statement).
Starting early and having a plan are the most important steps, Nordquist said.
“Those two have a lot more to do with what you end up with than the amount, even if you’re saving at a 6 percent to 10 percent level,” Nordquist said. “When you’re young but not in the market, you won’t build the nest egg.”
People in their 30s were the most likely to have a retirement plan in place, but 45 percent of respondents said they have so few assets there is no reason for them to have a plan, while another 25 percent said they don’t know how to create one.
“The ones without a plan we worry about,” Nordquist said.
Their plan could become to work until they drop.
— By Eric Rosenbaum, CNBC.com – Edited by Dan Stevens