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2008 Survey: Americans Confidence in Comfortable . . .
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2008 Survey: Americans' Confidence in Comfortable Retirement Lowest in 7 Years, Health Costs a Big Concern
April 9, 2008
Americans' confidence in their ability to afford a comfortable retirement has
dropped to its lowest level in seven years, reflecting worries about health
costs, the economy, and home values, according to the 18th annual Retirement
Confidence Survey® (RCS) released today.
Key findings from the survey include:
Overall retirement confidence drops sharply The
percentage of workers very confident about having enough money for a comfortable
retirement decreased sharply, from 27 percent in 2007 to 18 percent in 2008, a
decline of 9 percentage points and the biggest one-year drop in the 18-year
history of the survey. Retiree confidence in having a financially secure
retirement has also decreased sharply, from 41 percent very confident to 29
percent, down 12 percentage points.
Health care costs have become a big issue for
retirees Among retirees who left the work force earlier than
planned, more than half (54 percent) say they did so because of health problems
or disability. Almost half of retirees (44 percent) say they have spent more
than expected on health care expenses. More than half of retirees (54 percent)
say they are now more concerned about their financial future than they were
right after they retired, a 14 percentage-point increase from a year ago (40
percent in 2007).
Workers may be waking up to the lack of health insurance in
retirement The RCS finds that 34 percent of all workers now expect
to have access to employer-paid health insurance in retirement, down 8
percentage points from last year (42 percent in 2007). Although 41 percent of
retirees say they currently have access to health insurance through a former
employer, many employers are eliminating health care coverage for future
retirees.
Retirement planning up, but still not high Less than half
of workers (47 percent) say they and/or their spouse have tried to calculate how
much money they will need for a comfortable retirement, up from the 42 percent
measured in 2004--2006 and considerably higher than the low point of 29 percent
recorded in 1996. As before, the 2008 RCS finds that doing a retirement savings
calculation is particularly effective at changing worker behavior: 44 percent
who calculated a goal changed their retirement planning, and of those almost
two-thirds (59 percent) started saving or investing more.
Most savings levels are modest The percentage of workers
(72 percent) saying they have saved for retirement has returned to 2001--2006
levels after a slight dip in 2007 (66 percent). Forty-nine percent of workers
report total savings and investments (not including the value of their primary
residence or any defined benefit plans) of less than $50,000. Twenty-two percent
of workers and 28 percent of retirees say they have no savings of any kind.
Source: http://www.ebri.org/
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