The Prince George Citizen

Twice as many U.S. seniors working than in 1985

- Suzanne WOOLLEY

Just as single-income families began to vanish in the last century, many of America’s elderly are now forgoing retirement for the same reason: they don’t have enough money. Rickety social safety nets, inadequate retirement savings plans and sky high health-care costs are all conspiring to make the concept of leaving the workforce something to be more feared than desired.

For the first time in 57 years, the participat­ion rate in the U.S. labour force of retirement-age workers has cracked the 20 per cent mark, according to a new report from money manager United Income.

As of February, the ranks of people age 65 or older who are working or seeking paid work doubled from a low of 10 per cent back in early 1985. The biggest spike in employment has gone to college-educated older workers; the share of all employees age 65 or older with at least an undergradu­ate degree is now 53 per cent, up from 25 per cent in 1985.

This rise of college-educated older workers has pushed the demographi­c’s inflation-adjusted income up to an average of $78,000, 63 per cent higher than the $48,000 older folks brought home in 1985.

By comparison, American workers below the age of 65 saw their average income rise by only 38 per cent over the same period, to an average of $55,000. United Income’s calculatio­ns draw on recently released data from the U.S. Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

There’s a mismatch between older workers who need the income the most and those who are able to work and working, said Elizabeth Kelly, senior vice president of operations for United Income and a former special assistant to the president at the White House National Economic Council during the Obama administra­tion.

“These are the more educated, wealthier individual­s in better health who are continuing to work, but it’s probably their lesseducat­ed, working-class counterpar­ts who need to work the most,” Kelly said.

The BLS expects the big wave of aging baby boomers to represent the strongest growth in the labour force participat­ion rate through at least 2024.

“By 2024, baby boomers will have reached ages 60 to 78,” a BLS report noted.

“And some of them are expected to continue working even after they qualify for Social Security benefits.”

The retirement math is ugly, even for those who are seemingly well-off. Teresa Ghilarducc­i, an economics professor at the New School for Social Research, has estimated that Social Security replaces about 40 per cent to 50 per cent of one’s preretirem­ent income. The general thinking is that people need around 80 per cent of preretirem­ent income to get by after they stop working. (Online retirement calculator­s can give a rough sense for what you need to save, and earn on savings, to get there.)

The typical worker in the bottom 50 per cent of the income distributi­on, earning less than $40,000 a year, has no retirement savings. Those in the middle 40 per cent of income distributi­on, earning from $40,000 to $115,000, have a median amount of $60,000 saved, according to Ghilarducc­i’s research. Workers in the top 10 per cent of income distributi­on making more than $115,000, meanwhile, have a median amount of $200,000 saved.

They, too, are woefully under-saved, although it’s worth noting that these calculatio­ns don’t include real estate and other tangible assets, or the chance of an inheritanc­e.

Ghilarducc­i’s rough estimate of what a typical college-educated profession­al must amass to retire fairly comfortabl­y?

“Over $1 million or two.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Greeter Diane Robinson welcomes customers at a Walmart in Florence, S.C. More than 20 per cent of Americans aged 65 and older are working or seeking work, up from 10 per cent in 1985, according to a report by United Income.
AP FILE PHOTO Greeter Diane Robinson welcomes customers at a Walmart in Florence, S.C. More than 20 per cent of Americans aged 65 and older are working or seeking work, up from 10 per cent in 1985, according to a report by United Income.

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