The Sufficiency of Retirement Savings: Comparing Cohorts at the Time of Retirement

Year of Publication
2007
Author
Book Title
Redefining Retirement: How Will Boomers Fare?
Abstract

Assessing savings sufficiency requires detailed information on both potential retirement benefits and the
characteristics of a national sample of older citizens. This chapter uses the Health and Retirement Survey
and the New Beneficiary Survey linked to administrative records to assess and compare the saving
adequacy of two different cohorts. Specifically we compare the two groups in terms of their annuitized
net wealth (ANW) and ANW relative to the poverty line, as well as the near-poverty line. We find that the
mean wealth levels of both new retiree cohorts rose over time (by about two-thirds for wealth and by half
for ANW), but the chance of meeting social adequacy targets has also risen. This shortfall we believe is
concentrated increasingly among nonmarried persons, and those with low human capital and labor force
attachment. In other words, vulnerability during the working life appears to persist into retirement.

URL
https://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1363&context=prc_papers
Publisher
Oxford University Press
City
New York, NY
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