OTHER VOICES
A secure retirement a fading dream for growing numbers
Published: Sunday, March 24, 2013 at 6:30 a.m.
Last Modified: Friday, March 22, 2013 at 6:10 p.m.
To hear some people talk, you’d think all older Americans were living large
on Easy Street. Policy wonks debate whether older people have too many
advantages. Every week, it seems as though Washington comes up with another
proposal to cut Social Security benefits, restrict Medicare eligibility or scale
back veterans’ benefits.
But a
new AARP Florida survey reflects a far more sobering reality for Floridians 50
and older, and by extension, older Americans across the nation:
Some
53 percent of Florida voters age 50-plus now say they plan to put off complete
retirement, compared to only 8 percent who say they are very likely to retire as
planned.
Asked
why they are planning to work past what they considered “retirement age,” 62
percent of them said they will need the money.
Older
Floridians overwhelmingly say they are banking on Social Security to be there
for them when they retire. Some 83 percent say they expect Social Security to
provide income for them in retirement.
By
contrast, only 48 percent are expecting a pension from their employer, and less
than half expect income from stock investments (46 percent), an IRA (38 percent)
or a 401(k) retirement account (33 percent).
Only a
little more than one in four (27 percent) say they are very satisfied with the
money they are putting into savings. Some 35 percent are not very, or not at
all, satisfied.
At
first glance, the results of this survey, which is based on interviews with more
than 800 Floridians age 50 and older in December, seem to be out of step with
rising economic optimism. Surging stock prices and a strengthening real estate
market have a lot of Floridians feeling more upbeat lately.
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