Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › 2008 RCS FACT SHEET – US Retirement Survey
- This topic has 15 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 2 months ago by
meadandale.
-
AuthorPosts
-
April 30, 2008 at 9:27 AM #12602April 30, 2008 at 9:42 AM #196536
Coronita
ParticipantNearly half of all workers 25 and older have less than $50,000 saved for retirement (excluding their homes and any pensions).
Interesting. I wonder why pensions were excluded. Isn't the point of a pension for retirement? Not that pensions are totally popular these days. But still, it seems weird that it would be excluded.
Edit: Actually, I noticed from the survey that it also excludes things from "Saving for retirement" like 401k. They number they used to determine "$50k saved for retirement" is things not in retirement plans. So things like 401k's aren't include. Which seems a little unusual for a sure to get a gauge of retirement planning. Folks tucking money into 401k plus other company sponsored ira accounts probably aren't having that much cash on hand in savings account for retirement. Maybe I'm reading something wrong, but it doesn't look that bad.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
April 30, 2008 at 9:42 AM #196570Coronita
ParticipantNearly half of all workers 25 and older have less than $50,000 saved for retirement (excluding their homes and any pensions).
Interesting. I wonder why pensions were excluded. Isn't the point of a pension for retirement? Not that pensions are totally popular these days. But still, it seems weird that it would be excluded.
Edit: Actually, I noticed from the survey that it also excludes things from "Saving for retirement" like 401k. They number they used to determine "$50k saved for retirement" is things not in retirement plans. So things like 401k's aren't include. Which seems a little unusual for a sure to get a gauge of retirement planning. Folks tucking money into 401k plus other company sponsored ira accounts probably aren't having that much cash on hand in savings account for retirement. Maybe I'm reading something wrong, but it doesn't look that bad.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
April 30, 2008 at 9:42 AM #196592Coronita
ParticipantNearly half of all workers 25 and older have less than $50,000 saved for retirement (excluding their homes and any pensions).
Interesting. I wonder why pensions were excluded. Isn't the point of a pension for retirement? Not that pensions are totally popular these days. But still, it seems weird that it would be excluded.
Edit: Actually, I noticed from the survey that it also excludes things from "Saving for retirement" like 401k. They number they used to determine "$50k saved for retirement" is things not in retirement plans. So things like 401k's aren't include. Which seems a little unusual for a sure to get a gauge of retirement planning. Folks tucking money into 401k plus other company sponsored ira accounts probably aren't having that much cash on hand in savings account for retirement. Maybe I'm reading something wrong, but it doesn't look that bad.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
April 30, 2008 at 9:42 AM #196615Coronita
ParticipantNearly half of all workers 25 and older have less than $50,000 saved for retirement (excluding their homes and any pensions).
Interesting. I wonder why pensions were excluded. Isn't the point of a pension for retirement? Not that pensions are totally popular these days. But still, it seems weird that it would be excluded.
Edit: Actually, I noticed from the survey that it also excludes things from "Saving for retirement" like 401k. They number they used to determine "$50k saved for retirement" is things not in retirement plans. So things like 401k's aren't include. Which seems a little unusual for a sure to get a gauge of retirement planning. Folks tucking money into 401k plus other company sponsored ira accounts probably aren't having that much cash on hand in savings account for retirement. Maybe I'm reading something wrong, but it doesn't look that bad.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
April 30, 2008 at 9:42 AM #196652Coronita
ParticipantNearly half of all workers 25 and older have less than $50,000 saved for retirement (excluding their homes and any pensions).
Interesting. I wonder why pensions were excluded. Isn't the point of a pension for retirement? Not that pensions are totally popular these days. But still, it seems weird that it would be excluded.
Edit: Actually, I noticed from the survey that it also excludes things from "Saving for retirement" like 401k. They number they used to determine "$50k saved for retirement" is things not in retirement plans. So things like 401k's aren't include. Which seems a little unusual for a sure to get a gauge of retirement planning. Folks tucking money into 401k plus other company sponsored ira accounts probably aren't having that much cash on hand in savings account for retirement. Maybe I'm reading something wrong, but it doesn't look that bad.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
April 30, 2008 at 10:23 AM #196571sd_bear
ParticipantThey’re measuring what people save for retirement and exclude retirement accounts? That can’t be right. I would only include retirement accounts.
April 30, 2008 at 10:23 AM #196604sd_bear
ParticipantThey’re measuring what people save for retirement and exclude retirement accounts? That can’t be right. I would only include retirement accounts.
April 30, 2008 at 10:23 AM #196628sd_bear
ParticipantThey’re measuring what people save for retirement and exclude retirement accounts? That can’t be right. I would only include retirement accounts.
April 30, 2008 at 10:23 AM #196650sd_bear
ParticipantThey’re measuring what people save for retirement and exclude retirement accounts? That can’t be right. I would only include retirement accounts.
April 30, 2008 at 10:23 AM #196687sd_bear
ParticipantThey’re measuring what people save for retirement and exclude retirement accounts? That can’t be right. I would only include retirement accounts.
April 30, 2008 at 2:11 PM #196691meadandale
Participant“The top financial obstacles people listed were, in order: the rising cost of living, health insurance or medical expenses, mortgage payments, debt, and fuel and energy costs.”
None of these really apply to my brother who just turned 57.
He was out of work for 6 weeks over christmas due to a back injury, he’s declared bankruptcy in the last few years because he owed about $40k in CC debt he had no hope of ever repaying.
But somehow he thought it was a good idea to buy not one but TWO flatscreen tv’s in the last few months (one for the bedroom and one for the living room). Wants to get himself a blueray player next and he needs a new entertainment center as his new flatscreen is sitting ghetto style on TOP of his current entertainment center with the old tv still in it.
That and he’s been sinking ever larger amounts of money into his coffee addiction for multiple espresso machines, coffee grinders and drip coffee makers, as well as outfitting himself with and ever growing roasting setup. But he’ll tell you he’s saving money on coffee.
Oh, and he has $0 in the bank, doesn’t own anything (except a 10 year old car that needs to be replaced) and has no pension–nada.
April 30, 2008 at 2:11 PM #196722meadandale
Participant“The top financial obstacles people listed were, in order: the rising cost of living, health insurance or medical expenses, mortgage payments, debt, and fuel and energy costs.”
None of these really apply to my brother who just turned 57.
He was out of work for 6 weeks over christmas due to a back injury, he’s declared bankruptcy in the last few years because he owed about $40k in CC debt he had no hope of ever repaying.
But somehow he thought it was a good idea to buy not one but TWO flatscreen tv’s in the last few months (one for the bedroom and one for the living room). Wants to get himself a blueray player next and he needs a new entertainment center as his new flatscreen is sitting ghetto style on TOP of his current entertainment center with the old tv still in it.
That and he’s been sinking ever larger amounts of money into his coffee addiction for multiple espresso machines, coffee grinders and drip coffee makers, as well as outfitting himself with and ever growing roasting setup. But he’ll tell you he’s saving money on coffee.
Oh, and he has $0 in the bank, doesn’t own anything (except a 10 year old car that needs to be replaced) and has no pension–nada.
April 30, 2008 at 2:11 PM #196748meadandale
Participant“The top financial obstacles people listed were, in order: the rising cost of living, health insurance or medical expenses, mortgage payments, debt, and fuel and energy costs.”
None of these really apply to my brother who just turned 57.
He was out of work for 6 weeks over christmas due to a back injury, he’s declared bankruptcy in the last few years because he owed about $40k in CC debt he had no hope of ever repaying.
But somehow he thought it was a good idea to buy not one but TWO flatscreen tv’s in the last few months (one for the bedroom and one for the living room). Wants to get himself a blueray player next and he needs a new entertainment center as his new flatscreen is sitting ghetto style on TOP of his current entertainment center with the old tv still in it.
That and he’s been sinking ever larger amounts of money into his coffee addiction for multiple espresso machines, coffee grinders and drip coffee makers, as well as outfitting himself with and ever growing roasting setup. But he’ll tell you he’s saving money on coffee.
Oh, and he has $0 in the bank, doesn’t own anything (except a 10 year old car that needs to be replaced) and has no pension–nada.
April 30, 2008 at 2:11 PM #196770meadandale
Participant“The top financial obstacles people listed were, in order: the rising cost of living, health insurance or medical expenses, mortgage payments, debt, and fuel and energy costs.”
None of these really apply to my brother who just turned 57.
He was out of work for 6 weeks over christmas due to a back injury, he’s declared bankruptcy in the last few years because he owed about $40k in CC debt he had no hope of ever repaying.
But somehow he thought it was a good idea to buy not one but TWO flatscreen tv’s in the last few months (one for the bedroom and one for the living room). Wants to get himself a blueray player next and he needs a new entertainment center as his new flatscreen is sitting ghetto style on TOP of his current entertainment center with the old tv still in it.
That and he’s been sinking ever larger amounts of money into his coffee addiction for multiple espresso machines, coffee grinders and drip coffee makers, as well as outfitting himself with and ever growing roasting setup. But he’ll tell you he’s saving money on coffee.
Oh, and he has $0 in the bank, doesn’t own anything (except a 10 year old car that needs to be replaced) and has no pension–nada.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.