As Baby Boomers age, the
prospect of retirement income becomes increasingly important, particularly the necessity of having adequate retirement income. The Employee Benefit Research Institute
(EBRI) recently released a new version of its Retirement Security
Projection Model (RSPM) that incorporates the impacts of freezes in defined
benefit pension plans and the crises in both the housing and financial markets.
It also better reflects the real-world behaviour of the 24 million
participants in 401(k) participants and the 20 million participants in individual
retirement accounts (IRAs). Through this process, EBRI is able to
generate a national Retirement Savings Shortfall or RSS which is defined as the size of income deficits that households are simulated to generate in retirement.
One of the basic
objectives of the RSPM is to simulate the percentage of the population that are
at risk of having insufficient retirement income to cover average expenses and
uninsured health care costs including long-term care costs at age 65 and older.
RSPM also provides information on the distribution of the likely number
of years before those at risk run short of money and the percentage of
pre-retirement compensation that they will require in terms of additional
savings to provide a 50, 70 and 90 percent probability of adequate retirement
income.
Here are the components
that EBRI uses to define retirement household wealth:
1.) Social Security
2.) Defined Benefit
Pension Plan annuities or lump-sum distributions
3.) Defined Contribution
Pension Plan balances
4.) Net Housing Equity
5.) Individual Retirement
Account balances
Let's look at how EBRI
calculates cash flow for retirees. The baseline model assumes that all
workers retire at age 65 and that they immediately draw benefits from Social
Security and any defined benefit pension plans. To the extent that the
sum of their living and uninsured medical expenses exceed their after-tax
income from these sources, the retiree begins to withdraw funds from their
IRAs, defined contribution and cash balance plans. Individual accounts
are tracked until they are depleted. At that point, net housing equity is
added to retirement savings as a lump sum (not as a reverse mortgage). If
all retirement savings are exhausted and if Social Security and defined benefit
payments are not sufficient to pay expenses, the individual is deemed to have
run short of money at that point in time.
Here is a graphic showing
the 2014 Retirement Savings Shortfalls at age 65 by age cohort, marital status
and gender:
It is very important to
keep in mind that this data includes the simulated life paths of retirees that
will not run short of money as well as those retirees that will run short. As well, these numbers are present values
in 2014 dollars and represent the additional amount that individuals will
have to save by age 65 to eliminate the possibility of running out of money.
The RSS values are largest for Gen Xers because it is assumed that
health-care costs will increase at a faster rate than general inflation.
If we exclude retirees
that will not run short of money, here are the modified Retirement Savings
Shortfall amounts:
It is interesting to see
how much of an impact home health care and long-term care costs have on the
potential size of Retirement Savings Shortfalls. Here is a graphic
showing the RSS for Early and Late Boomers and Gen Xers if there are no nursing
home or home health care costs:
For example, when single
male Early Boomers who avail themselves of nursing home or home health care
services, the present average value of the financial shortfall is $33,778 in
retirement as seen on the first graphic. If neither of these services are
required, the shortfall drops to an average of only $10,201 as seen on the
graphic above. If long-term and home health care costs are ignored, RSS
decreases by an average of 74 percent for all age cohorts. Obviously, households or
individuals that require long-term care or home health care assistance can
suffer catastrophic financial consequences if there are insufficient funds to
provide for these potential necessities.
EBRI calculates that the
aggregate retirement savings deficit number, taking into account the current
level of benefit provided by Social Security and the assumption that the equity
built up in housing is used when it is needed, is estimated to be $4.13
trillion for all U.S. households where the head of the household is between 25
and 64.
In a scenario where Social Security benefits are reduced starting in
2033, the aggregate deficit increases by 6 percent to $4.38 trillion.
EBRI's analysis shows that there is a very significant shortfall how
Americans have saved for their retirement years, particularly in light of the
current Social
Security Trustees Report which projects that the funds for Old-Age,
Survivors and Disability Insurance (OASDI) will be exhausted by 2033 which will
result in a reduction in payments to retirees of approximately 22 percent in
2033 as shown on this graph which looks at OASDI income less cost:
Obviously, any future cuts to Social
Security payments will make the Retirement Savings Shortfall calculated by EBRI
look even worse than it already does.
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