Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sanders in ballpark on savings

- TOM KERTSCHER MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL

At a post-election town hall meeting in Kenosha, 2016 Democratic presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders opined on why Republican Donald Trump is headed for the Oval Office and not the Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton.

“One of the arguments as to why Trump won is the belief that most of — or many of — his supporters are sexist or are racist or are homophobes. I happen not to believe that`s the case,” Sanders said at the Dec. 12 meeting, which was broadcast on MSNBC.

“I think what he did do is, he said, ‘You know what, there is a lot of pain in this country; people are scared and people are worried.’ One example: Right now, 50% of older workers, 55 to 64 — you know how much money they have in the bank, as they enter retirement? Who wants to guess?

“Zero!” the Vermont senator exclaimed. “What do you think? People are scared to death of retirement.”

On another haves and havenots claim — that “the top onetenth of 1%” of Americans “own almost as much wealth as the bottom 90%”— we gave Sanders a Mostly True.

But, are half of Americans approachin­g retirement with nothing

in the bank?

Sanders’ evidence

To support Sanders’ statement, his campaign cited a May 2015 report on the financial status of retirees and workers approachin­g retirement from a gold-standard source, the nonpartisa­n U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office.

Sanders had requested it in his role as ranking member of the Senate Subcommitt­ee on Primary Health and Retirement Security.

The report used data from the latest triennial Survey of Consumer Finances done by the Federal Reserve Board, in 2013. It is the premier survey of wealth in the United States, according to Wellesley College economics professor Courtney Coile, who is the associate director of the Retirement Research Center at the National Bureau of Economic Research.

The GAO found that 52% of households age 55 and over have no money in what the report defined as retirement savings — an Individual Retirement Account (IRA) or a defined-contributi­on plan, such as a 401(k).

But that group includes people who are well into retirement.

The situation is somewhat less dire for the group that Sanders cited at the town hall, those ages 55 to 64. The report found that 41% of the people in that group have no money in definedcon­tribution plans or IRAs.

There’s another point of clarificat­ion, however. The report did not consider in that statistic other savings that the 55 to 64 age group have.

The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College ran those numbers for us, using the same Federal Reserve survey data, although it expressed the statistic a little differentl­y.

The center found that 38.5% of Americans ages 55 to 64 do not have a retirement account such as an IRA, traditiona­l pension or You can watch PolitiFact Wisconsin segments on Wednesday and Friday evenings during the TODAY’S TMJ 4 Live at 6 newscast.

401(k), but neverthele­ss have some savings. With that group, the median amount of their savings is $1,000 — in other words, half of them have savings of more than $1,000 and half have less.

So, it’s not as though those people have “zero” in the bank, although many don’t have savings that would last them very long in retirement.

Our rating

Sanders said 50% of workers ages 55 to 64 have “zero” money “in the bank as they enter retirement.”

His claim is somewhat high but doesn’t give a misleading impression. A widely respected government report says 41% of Americans 55 to 64 have no savings in common retirement accounts such as an IRA or a 401(k).

It’s also worth noting that some in that group have other savings not in retirement accounts, though for many of them it’s less than $1,000.

For a statement that is partially accurate but leaves out important details, our rating is Half True.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States