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Many Boomers Not Prepared for Retirement

Bob Scherry had to delay retirement in order to catch-up with his savings
Bob Scherry had to delay retirement in order to catch-up with his savings

61-year-old Bob Scherry figured he had a pretty good retirement program when he was a sheet metal worker, in the 1980s. His company provided a pension plan that squirreled away money for employees in their golden years.

BOB SCHERRY: You didn't have to think about it, it went in automatically.

With a pension the employer takes all the risk and responsibility of investments and guarantees a set monthly stipend to retirees for the rest of their lives. But pensions have gone out of favor with employers. Today, fewer than one in five private sector workers have them.

Most employers have switched to so-called 401(k) programs. Named after a subsection of US tax code, they guarantee a defined contribution from the employer but make no guarantee on outcomes. The employer's contribution along with the employee's is invested in a select group of mutual funds, real estate trusts and fixed income options. It's up to the employee to decide where exactly to put the money within the range of choices offered.

Bob Scherry's current employer has a 401(k) retirement plan. He says that's been a challenge, because he's no investment whiz.

BOB SCHERRY: I don't have the smarts. 401(k)s you have to think about, or trust somebody to administer the plan for you.

Scherry is not alone, according to J.B. Silvers, a finance expert at Case Western Reserve University.

JB SILVERS: A typical employer might offer 50 different funds for people to choose from, under the theory they're able to choose, and have the knowledge to do that. And overwhelmingly, they don't do a very good job.

Westlake-based retirement plan consultant Dave Kocsis blames widespread financial illiteracy.

DAVE KOCSIS: People need to start learning in grade school and high school how to be financially self-reliant, and not just how to balance a checkbook, because that's really not even relevant anymore.

One of the most common missteps people make is not saving enough for retirement. Studies show only 1 % of people with 401(k) plans contribute the maximum allowed; 20% of workers eligible don't participate in a plan at all.

And there's this from a Boston College think-tank. The Center for Retirement Research calculates that the typical household with two workers in the 55 to 64 age range has about $120,000 in retirement savings. That would provide a measly $7,000 a year. The typical household needs at least four times that much, plus Social Security to maintain their standard of living.

Not only do we put too little in, we take it out too early. New data show a record number of workers raided their retirement funds during the recent recession to make ends meet. ---

DAVE KOCSIS: … taking care of their families, just putting food on the table, putting kids through college --- whatever the case may be. Now, they're trying to shovel in as much money as they possibly can into their retirement accounts.

J.B. Silvers of Case Western says the shovel isn't big enough and that's going to cause huge problems over the next twenty years, especially for those now hitting retirement age.

JB SILVERS: They probably won't have enough time until retirement to make that up, and they may not even understand how much they have to save to be able to have a chance at retirement, either.

Some financial experts say it's time to overhaul or even scrap the 401(k) system; replace it with something that presents less risk for the average investor, mandates employee contributions and totally prohibits access till retirement age. Otherwise, critics say, many more people may be standing on the edge of poverty in their old age.

David C. Barnett was a senior arts & culture reporter for Ideastream Public Media. He retired in October 2022.