Video: 18th Annual Retirement Confidence Survey(R): Health Care, Economy Major Concerns in Workers' Record Drop in Retirement Co
23 Abril 2008 - 8:38PM
PR Newswire (US)
WASHINGTON, April 23 /PRNewswire/ -- Reflecting the growing concern
over health care costs and economic issues, American workers'
confidence in being able to afford a comfortable retirement
decreased over the past year by a rate unmatched in the 18 years of
the Retirement Confidence Survey(R) (RCS), according to
just-released survey results. To view the Multimedia News Release,
go to: http://www.prnewswire.com/mnr/ebri/32335/ The percentage of
workers who are very confident about having enough money for a
comfortable retirement decreased sharply, from 27 percent in 2007
to 18 percent in 2008, the biggest one-year drop in the 18-year
history of the RCS. Retiree confidence in having a financially
secure retirement also decreased, from 41 percent to 29 percent, a
drop of 12 percentage points. Decreases in confidence occurred
across all age groups and income levels but was particularly acute
among younger workers and those with lower income. The RCS was
conducted by the nonpartisan Employee Benefit Research Institute
(EBRI), and full results are online at
http://www.ebri.org/surveys/rcs/2008. According to Dan Houston,
president, Retirement & Investor Services at the Principal
Financial Group(R), while the survey shows retirement confidence is
at a record low, it's critical for Americans to show financial
resolve and prudence. "Despite economic fears, market volatility is
cyclical and relatively short-term. Americans should take a deep
breath, be wise consumers, stay out of debt and most important,
stick to their long-term financial plans," Houston said. The
Principal Financial Group, one of the nation's 401(k) leaders, is a
long-time underwriter of the annual EBRI RCS. RCS results indicate
that health costs in particular have become a big concern for
retirees: Among retirees who left the work force earlier than
planned, more than half (54 percent) say they did so because of
health problems or disability. Almost half of retirees (44 percent)
say they have spent more than expected on health care expenses.
More than half of retirees (54 percent) say they are now more
concerned about their financial future than they were right after
they retired, a 14 percentage-point increase from a year ago (40
percent in 2007). On a positive note, the survey found that about
half of workers (47 percent) say they and/or their spouse have
tried to calculate how much money they will need for a comfortable
retirement, up considerably from the low point of 29 percent
measured in 1996. As before, the 2008 survey finds that doing a
retirement savings calculation is particularly effective at
changing worker behavior: 44 percent who calculated a goal changed
their retirement planning, and of those almost two-thirds (59
percent) started saving or investing more. The survey picked up
several other signs of public unease about retirement: -- Overall
concerns about basic expenses: Confidence in specific financial
aspects related to retirement decreased. In particular, the
percentage saying they are very confident in having enough money to
take care of basic expenses decreased from 40 percent in 2007 to 34
percent in 2008 for workers and from 48 percent to 34 percent for
retirees. -- Worker health concerns: Measured another way, workers
said they are increasingly not confident about having enough money
for medical expenses (43 percent in 2008, up from 32 percent in
2007) and for long-term care expenses (54 percent in 2008, up from
44 percent last year). -- Retiree concerns: Retirees' loss of
confidence is reflected in several attitudes they hold about their
retirement finances. Retirees are less likely than in 2007 to
believe they can always cut back on their lifestyle if it looks
like they might use up all of their savings (61 percent, down from
70 percent). At the same time, 39 percent of retirees now think
they are likely to live long enough to use up all of their savings
(up 10 percentage points from 29 percent in 2007). -- Retiree
health coverage: Barely one-third of all workers now expect to have
access to employment-based health insurance in retirement, down 8
percentage points (from 42 percent in 2007 to 34 percent in 2008).
Although 41 percent of retirees say they currently have access to
health insurance through a former employer, many employers are
eliminating health care coverage for future retirees. -- Confidence
by age and income: The percentage saying they are very confident
about having enough money for a comfortable retirement decreased
from 31 percent in 2007 to 18 percent in 2008 among workers ages
25-34, and from 28 percent to 16 percent among workers ages 35-44.
Similarly, it decreased from 14 percent to 5 percent among workers
with household income under $35,000 and from 25 percent to 13
percent among those with income of $35,000-$74,999. The 2008
Retirement Confidence Survey(R) was conducted in January 2008
through 20-minute random telephone interviews with 1,322
individuals (1,057 workers and 265 retirees) age 25 and older in
the United States. The survey has a margin of error of plus or
minus 3 percentage points. Details of the methodology appear in the
April 2008 EBRI Issue Brief, online at http://www.ebri.org/ About
the Principal Financial Group The Principal Financial Group(R) (The
Principal (R)) is a leader in offering businesses, individuals and
institutional clients a wide range of financial products and
services, including retirement and investment services, life and
health insurance, and banking through its diverse family of
financial services companies. A member of the Fortune 500, the
Principal Financial Group has $311.1 billion in assets under
management and serves some 18.6 million customers worldwide from
offices in Asia, Australia, Europe, Latin America and the United
States. Principal Financial Group, Inc. is traded on the New York
Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol PFG. For more information,
visit http://www.principal.com/.
http://www.prnewswire.com/mnr/ebri/32335DATASOURCE: Principal
Financial Group CONTACT: Susan Houser of the Principal Financial
Group, +1-515-248-2268, ; or John MacDonald of EBRI,
+1-202-775-6349, Web site: http://www.principal.com/
http://www.ebri.org/
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