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Why younger boomers are saving less – and how they can build a solid retirement

A baby boomer, from the youngest generation of her generation

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Younger baby boomers lag significantly behind older baby boomers in retirement savings, averaging more than $50,000, according to a new study from Boston College’s Center for Retirement Research. The study attributes the slowdown in savings to the 18-month Great Recession and, to a lesser extent, the changing demographics of younger baby boomers.

Consider working with a financial advisor to maximize your take-home retirement.

The study focuses on the retirement savings of those born between 1946 and 1964. It turns out that the youngest cohort of this generation, those born between about 1958 and 1964, has a combined retirement wealth of an average of $299,700 – including pensions, Social Security benefits and personal savings of an average $299,700. . In contrast, older baby boomers have an average of $350,000 or more.

The researchers used the Health and Retirement Study to look at actual patterns of wealth accumulation by cohort and the Survey of Consumer Finances to gather insights about the experiences of older boomers during their working lives.

The study attributes the relatively low levels of retirement savings among late baby boomers to two factors: the Great Recession, which began in late 2007, and the changing demographics of younger baby boomers.

Before the end of the Great Recession in June 2009, unemployment rose to 10%, hitting many younger boomers – between the ages of 42 and 49 at the time – during their peak earning years. Even those who managed to keep their jobs faced losses, as many employers cut salaries and stopped matching employer contributions to workplace 401(k) retirement accounts.

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The link between work and wealth accumulation has decreased significantly for younger boomers compared to older boomers, reducing their retirement assets by an additional $55,600, the report said.

The decline in prosperity, the study concludes, “is a story of the Great Recession.”

Older black couple ponders how to increase their retirement savings
Older black couple ponders how to increase their retirement savings

The study also attributes some of the difference to demographics, with a higher percentage of Black and Hispanic households comprising the younger baby boomer cohort.

“Black and Hispanic households have less wealth than white households, so as their share of the total population increases, average cohort wealth will decline,” the report said. “Similarly, a decrease in the percentage of households that are married or have a college degree will decrease the average. These changing demographics, together with a decline in labor activity, accounted for 29 percent of the total decline.”

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