Canada's
Bank of Montreal recently released the results of another one of their fascinating surveys; this time, they asked Canadians
whether or not they expected to be carrying a mortgage as they "rode
west" into their sunset retirement years. Here are the results.
Across
Canada, an average of 51 percent of Canadians expect to be carrying a mortgage
into their retirement years. Regionally, these numbers vary greatly as
shown here:
Canada
Average: 51%
British
Columbia: 59%
Alberta:
46%
Manitoba/Saskatchewan:
48%
Ontario:
47%
Quebec:
58%
Atlantic
Canada: 43%
I am
not overly surprised by these numbers, particularly for British Columbia where
housing prices on the Lower Mainland are stratospheric and mortgages are
practically lifelong indentured servitude. Ontario's results are a bit off
if one were to consider only the 416 area code, however, many parts of Ontario
outside of the GTA remain relatively affordable. While Atlantic Canadians
have the lowest overall household incomes in Canada, they also benefit from
some of the lowest-priced real estate in Canada, leaving them the least worried
about carrying mortgage debt into retirement.
On
top of the issue of too much mortgage for too long, 52 percent of Canadian
homeowners feel that their debt load or mortgage is hindering their ability to
save for retirement.
Let's
look at some reasons why Canadians are concerned about having debt in their
sunset years. As shown on this graph, Canada's household debt levels (in
red) are higher than the Eurozone, the United States and the United Kingdom:
Here
is a graph showing what has happened to the ratio of debt to personal
disposable income in Canada since 1980:
Notice
that mortgage debt alone is approaching 100 percent of personal disposable
income up from a low of just above 40 percent less than 20 years ago.
Here
is another interesting graph showing the mean debt of Canadians in 2010 by age
group in thousands of dollars and by type of debt:
Canadians
between the ages of 56 and 65, prime retirement years, still have a substantial
debt load consisting of mortgage debt, secured lines of credit and other
consumer credit.
This
graph shows the distribution of household debt by age group as a share of the
total household sector debt:
Note how the blue line lies above the red line? As a
consequence of the aging population, the proportion of total household debt
held by older households has risen over the decade from 1999 (in red) when
compared to 2010 (in blue).
In
this graph, we see how overall household indebtedness has increased for the
same age group (31 to 35 years of age) between 1999 and 2010:
In
1999, a typical household aged 31 to 35 years of age had total mean debt of
$75,000; by 2010, a typical household aged 31 to 35 years of age had a total
mean debt of $120,000, an increase of 37.5 percent.
This
final graph shows the mean mortgage debt held by Canadians based on income and
age group for 2010:
Mortgage
debt rises for households with increased levels of household income as would be
expected, however, I was rather surprised to see that the 50 to 64 and 65 plus
age groups (green and yellow lines) still had mortgage debt even when their household income was in
excess of $125,000 annually, twice the average Canadian household income.
Canadians
concern about their personal debt levels during the last decades of their lives
is, well, concerning. If, as many analysts predict, housing prices drop
or interest rates rise, older Canadian households will find it even more
difficult to retire on a fixed income if, in fact, they have a pension at all. The
baby boomer generation may be facing the perfect personal financial storm for
the following reasons:
1.)
Higher than historically normal household debt levels.
2.)
A rising interest rate environment.
3.)
A housing market that is declining as more of their peers sell into a saturated
market to capitalize on their built-up home equity to fund their sunset years.
4.)
A lack of pension income outside of OAS and CPP, underfunded pensions or
defined contribution pensions that have lost value.
Yes, things really are different this time, particularly if
you compare the retirement prospects of baby boomers to the generation that
preceded it. The 51 percent of
Canadians that will still be heavily indebted in their retirement years will
find their new reality far different retirement reality from that of their
parents.
great analysis. this shows the momentum of another factor that will cause my age group (40) to turn into the working poor to support the poor vision of our politicians and baby boombers.
ReplyDeleteMany Canadians approaching retirement age will need to re-consider at what age they can afford to retire. Semi-retirement or phased-in retirement need to be options available to boomers. More will be working past 65; 70 will be the new "65".
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