Browsed by
Tag: retire

Can Immigration Help Shore-Up Our Social Security Retirement System?

Can Immigration Help Shore-Up Our Social Security Retirement System?

A paper by the Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) provides intriguing insights into the role of immigration on our Social Security retirement system. [See “America’s Demographic Challenge: Understanding the Role of Immigration,” Aug. 2017, by Kenneth Megan and Theresa Cardinal Brown]. The U.S. population has been aging rapidly the past few decades, due mainly to declining fertility rates and increasing life expectancies, a trend that is expected to continue. This demographic shift has placed a strain on our Social Security retirement…

Read More Read More

Retirement Likely to Be More Financially Challenging for Women Than Men

Retirement Likely to Be More Financially Challenging for Women Than Men

It’s all about the money, honey. In April [2018], the Census Bureau released data comparing men’s and women’s 2016 median earnings in over 300 occupations. In nearly all occupations, women earned less than men. Overall, women’s median 2016 earnings equaled $40,675, while men’s median earnings equaled $50,741-nearly 25% more! However, the gender pay gap varies among occupations. The widest gender pay gaps were in financial management and sales (real estate brokers, real estate sales agents, insurance sales agents), and in…

Read More Read More

Social Security Cost of Living Adjustments May Not Reflect Actual Cost Increases to Seniors

Social Security Cost of Living Adjustments May Not Reflect Actual Cost Increases to Seniors

When our nation’s Social Security program was enacted in 1935, there was no automatic adjustment in Social Security retirement benefits to account for inflation. Rather, Congress would periodically adjust benefits to reflect inflationary increases in the costs of goods and services. In 1972, however, Congress enacted an amendment to the Social Security Act that requires benefits to be increased based on the increase in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) the previous year. At the time of the 1972 amendment, there…

Read More Read More

Funding Gap Continues to Grow in Most State Pension Plans; What Are the Causes and Solutions?

Funding Gap Continues to Grow in Most State Pension Plans; What Are the Causes and Solutions?

A recent issue brief prepared by the Pew Charitable Trusts (Pew) reports that most state pension plans are significantly underfunded and that, for many, the funding gap is growing. [See “The State Pension Funding Gap: 2016. Investment shortfalls, insufficient contributions reduced funded levels for public worker retirement plans (Pew, April 12, 2018)]. Pew, founded in 1948, is an independent non-profit organization that strives to inform the public and improve public policy by providing useful data and analysis to illuminate issues…

Read More Read More

Women Face More Obstacles Than Men In Achieving Retirement Security

Women Face More Obstacles Than Men In Achieving Retirement Security

Women face more obstacles than men in achieving a financially secure retirement. That’s the conclusion of a recent report based on an online survey of 6,372 workers conducted by the Harris Poll between August and October 2017 for TransAmerican Retirement Studies. [See “Here and Now: How Women Can Take Control of Their Retirement” by TransAmerica Retirement Studies]. For starters, women earn only 80.5% of the salary of men. They are also more likely to work part-time and to take time…

Read More Read More

Retirement Expectations Versus Retirement Realities. There’s a large and troubling gap between the two

Retirement Expectations Versus Retirement Realities. There’s a large and troubling gap between the two

There exists a large and troubling gap between retirement expectations and retirement realities, according to the results of a recent online survey conducted by the Harris Poll on behalf of Prudential Insurance. [See “Planning Your Retirement? Expect the Unexpected” by Salene Hitchcock-Gear, Pres. Prudential Advisors] For starters, the average anticipated retirement age of pre-retirees was 65, while the actual retirement age of retirees was age 59–a six-year gap which is expected to widen into the future. Moreover, approximately half (51%)…

Read More Read More

The Dirty Dozen Retirement Savings and Investment Mistakes

The Dirty Dozen Retirement Savings and Investment Mistakes

I regularly review commentary, data, and analyses of respected financial advisors concerning retirement savings and investing. While they don’t all agree on everything, there exists a consensus around the most common retirement savings and investment mistakes. Here are the top “dirty dozen” mistakes (as I see them). 1. Holding a Large Portion of Your Savings in Just One or Two Stocks. Even if they are performing well today (or for years), if there occurs a major downturn in the companies’…

Read More Read More

Lessons Learned the Hard Way When This U.S. City Replaced Its Retirement Program With One That Severely Cut Benefits

Lessons Learned the Hard Way When This U.S. City Replaced Its Retirement Program With One That Severely Cut Benefits

For over fifty years, Palm Beach, California maintained a generous traditional defined benefit (DB) pension plan for its employees that based benefits on a percentage of the employee’s final average pay times years of service. As employees accumulated service and their pay increased over the years, their pension benefits grew exponentially. Upon retirement, the benefit was paid in the form of a life annuity, thereby guaranteeing that participants would never run out of money. During the 1990s, the plan was…

Read More Read More

Retirement Hopes, Plans, and Realities Across Three Generations

Retirement Hopes, Plans, and Realities Across Three Generations

For the past 20 years, Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies (TCRS) has surveyed U.S. workers about their attitudes towards retirement. TCRS’s most recent survey (Survey), conducted by the Harris Poll between August 9 and October 28, 2017 via an online survey of 6,372 representative workers across the U.S., reveals both similarities and differences in retirement views across three generations: Millennials (born 1979-2000), Generation Xers (born 1965-1978), and Baby Boomers (born 1946-1964). [See “Wishful Thinking or Within Reach? 18th Annual Transamerica…

Read More Read More

Follow These Rules to Minimize Your Medicare Premiums

Follow These Rules to Minimize Your Medicare Premiums

If you collect Social Security retirement benefits before age 65, you will automatically be enrolled in Medicare when you turn age 65. However, more and more Americans are delaying the start of their Social Security retirement benefits because the payment becomes increasingly larger the longer one waits (up until age 70). In the course, many Americans are missing critical Medicare enrollment deadlines and, as a result, paying higher Medicare premiums FOR LIFE. In general, you must enroll in Medicare during…

Read More Read More

Untitled 1