The Mercury News

Saving for retirement is a challenge for most Americans

- By Tim Grant

PITTSBURGH >> People at all income levels are guilty of not saving enough for retirement, but it may not be entirely their fault.

Income shocks — defined as an annual earnings drop of more than 10 percent — are so common that 96 percent of working Americans experience four or more of them by the time they reach age 70, according to research by the nonprofit National Endowment for Financial Education in Denver.

“You can do everything right, but life is going to happen,” said Bill Hensley, senior director of education at the endowment. “You may lose your job or you might have to take time off from work to care for a loved one. Things will happen that are beyond your control.”

The National Endowment for Financial Education study, conducted by researcher­s Teresa Ghilarducc­i and Anthony Webb, found that almost no one is safe from periods of lost income due to a health crisis, job loss or other life transition­s during their working years.

The researcher­s linked data from the Survey of Income and Program Participat­ion — a statistica­l survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau — with individual earnings records from the Social Security Administra­tion and the Internal Revenue Service. Taken together, these data provide an opportunit­y to investigat­e individual difference­s in retirement savings while controllin­g for difference­s in employment and earnings history, marital status, health status and disability history.

Ghilarducc­i and Webb looked at data from 2008 to 2012 with a weighted sample size of 15.7 million people. They found only a third of the people in the sample size were able to participat­e in a workplace retirement plan, which they argue could be a contributo­r to so many people not having enough money saved for retirement.

This report takes into account that income shocks such as unemployme­nt, divorce and other earnings changes often cluster together; and the impacts vary in magnitude depending on the person’s gender, race and socioecono­mic status.

Compared to their white peers, non-white workers have a greater risk of not having enough retirement savings.

African-American workers end up with $16,977 less than their white peers; Asian workers fall short between $11,743 and $41,979; and Hispanic non-white workers have between $8,280 and $24,278 less than white workers at retirement.

Among top income earners, the racial impact is more significan­t. Non-white workers end up with a deficit ranging from $19,000 to $54,000 compared to white workers, the study found.

The top 10 percent of people who were surveyed include workers earning $80,000 or more. They were more likely to be white and educated; more likely to work full-time for a large company; and 45 percent of the top 10 percent had a defined contributi­on retirement plan.

The middle 40 percent earning between $26,532 and $80,000 had three times the assets of the bottom group and 36 percent of them had a defined contributi­on retirement plan.

Only 7 percent of the bottom 50 percent — those earning $26,531 or less — have defined contributi­on retirement plans. The middle and bottom groups also are more likely to be disabled, divorced, widowed, separated, have fewer children and received government assistance.

The most negative impacts in a person’s working years come from declines in health, including long-term illness and a work-limiting disability.

When a low- or middle-income worker cannot work, or when income decreases significan­tly for any reason, often they withdraw money from retirement savings accounts — incurring large penalties — or they stop contributi­ng to their retirement savings. And that will hurt later. “Many Americans are and will experience a diminished retirement because their financial preparedne­ss was negatively impacted by an economic shock caused by external factors,” said Robert Fragasso, chairman and CEO of Fragasso Financial Advisors in Pittsburgh.

“People don’t see that coming and are thus not prepared for the financial hit that they will take as a result of those occurrence­s,” Fragasso said.

The National Endowment for Financial Education research shows that it’s not a matter of if some life event will disrupt a worker’s earnings, but when and how severe the effect of the income shock will be.

“There are a lot of factors that influence your ability to save for retirement,” Hensley said. “Knowing it’s going to happen to 96 percent of us, I would recommend people save — and save early.”

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