Millions of Baby Boomers Are Not Financially Prepared for Retirement

Tyler Mitchell By Tyler Mitchell Apr2,2025 #finance

Are you ready for retirement? Tens of millions of boomers aren’t.

Boomers by the Numbers

B&D has an excellent article on retirement: Baby Boomers – By the Numbers, Retirement Looks Bleak written October 24, 2024.

Many baby boomers-the 76 million Americans born between 1946 and 1964-have retired or are heading toward retirement, with roughly 10,000 retiring every day. Are they prepared? Based on savings statistics and actuarial charts, the answer is a resounding no. Insufficient savings and a lack of planning paint a gloomy picture for many retirees. This means more people working into their 70s and 80s, more poverty among elders, and more public resources devoted to health care for seniors. One in five baby boomers say they are concerned they will not have sufficient savings to cover basic living expenses in retirement.

A study by GoBankingRates found that 30% of people 55 and over have no retirement savings, with another 26% claiming they have saved less than $50,000.

When compared to typical benchmarks needed for a successful retirement, 54% of the older Americans in this survey lacked sufficient retirement funds. Nearly one-fifth of all baby boomers do not contribute to workplace savings plans such as a 401(k), and the majority of those who do are not contributing enough. And of those with savings, nearly half have less than $100,000, which would generate less than $7,000 a year in retirement income.

For the majority of baby boomers, this may mean putting off retirement, or not retiring at all:

  • The Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies found that 66% of baby boomers plan to or already are working past age 65, or do not plan to retire.
  • According to the Center on Aging & Work at Boston College, a recent study suggested that 64% of workers would like some kind
    of “phased retirement.”
  • However, the study also found that while approximately half of employers offered phased retirement for the top employees, only 10-20% of employers offered it for all employees.

One of the biggest misconceptions about retirement concerns Social Security. With more than half of baby boomers counting on Social Security as a primary source of income in retirement, most think they will need less, and receive more, than they actually will. A survey by the Indexed Annuity Leadership Council found that 60% of baby boomers think they need less than $1,000,000 in retirement, when in reality at least $250,000 will be needed for health care alone. More than half think the average monthly Social Security payment is $500 more than it is, a budget miscalculation that will leave a nearly $250,000 shortfall over a 30-year retirement.

Recently, the number of people taking Social Security early (age 62) has declined, but experts still believe that too many people are taking Social Security earlier than they should. Waiting until 70 to withdraw from Social Security could increase a retiree’s monthly payout by approximately 75% over taking it at age 62, and 32% over taking it at age 66.

In addition, many retirees do not realize that most tax-advantaged retirement accounts, such as traditional IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, SEP IRAs, and most 401(k)s, feature required minimum distributions. While individuals may withdraw from these retirement accounts beginning at age 59 without penalty, once they turn 70, individuals must take “required minimum distributions” each year. The amount an individual must withdraw is tied to an IRS formula based on life expectancy, and the penalties for noncompliance are steep.

Financial planning experts say that another miscalculation relates to life expectancy. Too many baby boomers do not to plan to live past 90, even though nearly half of women now age 65 will live to their 90th birthday. (The number is slightly lower for men.)

If all this sounds gloomy, it could get worse, as the two entitlements boomers rely upon most heavily-Medicare and Social Security-will run out of money in 20 years if drastic action is not taken.

Good News, Bad News

The good news is Social Security will not run out of money in 20 years.

The bad news is reduced benefits will stat no later than 2035 and possibly as early as 2023 is action isn’t take.

Trump has promised to not Touch Social Security.

That’s a lie considering Republicans expand Social Security at a cost of $196 billion.  And Trump pledged not to tax Social Security benefits and Trump

Finally, Trump certainly has no plans to shore things up, not counting DOGE silliness regarding date errors in the system.

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December 29, 2024: Team Trump Accelerates Social Security Insolvency, Where’s DOGE?

Republicans expand Social Security at a cost of $196 billion. Guess who benefits.

Where’s Trump, DOGE and Vance?

  • The WSJ reported Donald Trump endorsed it the bill.
  • CBS News reported Vice President-elect JD Vance of Ohio was among the 24 Republican senators to join 49 Democrats to advance the measure in an initial procedural vote that took place Wednesday.
  • Vance then buried his head by not voting on the bill. So did Marco Rubio. This maneuver will allow both to later pretend they didn’t vote to increase the deficit by $196 billion.

February 18, 2025: DOGE is Careless in Operation and Reckless in Reporting

Let’s discuss viral nonsense on alleged Social Security fraud and a simple explanation.

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On March 27, 2025 I commented US Debt Will Grow to a Staggering 156 Percent of GDP by 2055

If Congress extends the TCJA tax cuts with no offsetting savings, the deficits will surge.

Tyler Mitchell

By Tyler Mitchell

Tyler is a renowned journalist with years of experience covering a wide range of topics including politics, entertainment, and technology. His insightful analysis and compelling storytelling have made him a trusted source for breaking news and expert commentary.

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