Ten years after onset of Great Recession, how are U.S.
retirees doing?
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[September 27, 2018]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - This month marks 10
years since one of the most dramatic events of the financial crisis -
the collapse of the Lehman Brothers investment bank. In the financial
crash and Great Recession that followed, millions of Americans lost
their homes and jobs and saw their prospects for a secure retirement
damaged.
A decade later, the economy has recovered by most standard measures -
the stock market is making record highs, unemployment is at a 50-year
low point, gross domestic product is rising sharply and consumer
confidence is at an 18-year high.
But how are we doing on retirement security? The picture is very mixed,
as you can see from a comparison of key numbers before the crash and
today for retirees - and workers close to retirement.
HOUSING
The bubble in housing markets preceding the financial crisis was the
main cause of the economic downturn. Housing remains a critical
component of retirement security, since home equity is a more important
component of net worth than financial assets for older households. The
Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University (JCHS) reports
that 59 percent of households aged 55-64 owned retirement accounts in
2016, but 74 percent owned their primary homes. Among households aged
65-74, some 50 percent owned retirement accounts, and 79 percent owned
their primary homes.
In August, real housing prices (adjusted for non-housing inflation) were
9 percent below where they were in 2006, according to Jonathan Spader,
senior research associate at the JCHS. “Real prices are the most
relevant for retirement security,” he noted, “since it reflects how much
housing a dollar actually buys, and what you have available to tap as
home equity.”
You might well expect housing values to remain lower than when the
bubble burst - and some parts of the country have seen prices recover
much more strongly than others. But home ownership data for pre-retirees
points to a more worrisome trend.
The foreclosure crisis following the bubble’s collapse had a relatively
small impact on retired households (aged 65 or older) home ownership
fell at the smallest rate for any age group - down from 81 percent in
2004 to 79 percent in 2017, JCHS data shows. But among households aged
55 to 64, the homeownership rate fell from 82 percent in 2004 to 75
percent in 2017. “That’s a troubling figure, because it suggests a much
larger group of people will hit retirement age without home equity,”
Spader said.
Seniors who do not own homes also will be subject to the volatility of
rental costs, which have spiked in recent years and show no signs of
slowing down. Nearly one-third of all households were cost-burdened in
2016, JCHS reports, meaning they paid more than 30 percent of their
incomes for housing; among renters, 47 percent were cost-burdened.
The share of households over age 65 carrying mortgage debt into
retirement also has been rising - 41 percent in 2016, compared with 35
percent in 2007, and up from 22 percent in 1995.
RETIREMENT SAVING
The stock market has rocketed ahead more than fourfold since March 9,
2009, when the S&P 500 .SPX bottomed out at 676.53. The dramatic gains
are reflected in aggregate retirement account holdings - traditional IRA
accounts held $6.9 trillion at the end of 2016, according to the
Investment Company Institute (ICI), up from $4.2 trillion at the end of
2007.
But the gains are concentrated in the top third of earners in the
country, who held roughly 87 percent of all equities in 2016, according
to the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.
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Among the top 10 percent of U.S. households, the median value of their
retirement holdings jumped 70 percent from 2007, to $403,000 in 2016, according
to the most recent Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finance (SCF). For
middle-income groups, account values were stagnant or slightly down - a
staggering finding considering the strong market gains.
A key culprit is unemployment during the downturn, when workers not only were
unable to save for retirement but may have tapped savings to meet living
expenses, noted Teresa Ghilarducci, an economist and director of the Schwartz
Center for Economic Policy Analysis at the New School for Social Research.
“People in the bottom half of income had a lot more shocks and they were much
more prone to tap their retirement savings.”
Very little progress has been made in making retirement accounts more available
to workers since the recession. Fifty-two percent of families had access to
retirement accounts in 2016 - down from 53 percent in 2007, according to the SCF.
And the coverage story is worse among single people, minorities and less
educated workers. For example, 35 percent of single workers without children had
access to retirement accounts in 2016, unchanged from 2007. And 92 percent of
families in the top 10 percent of income had access in 2016, compared with just
11 percent of the lowest-income families, SCF data shows.
“When you disaggregate the data, you see that households who had more invested
to start with have rebounded, but others are just trying to claw their way
back,” said Monique Morrissey, an economist with the Economic Policy Institute.
And surprisingly few retired households are relying on retirement savings for a
significant portion of their income.
The Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) reported earlier this year that
within the first 18 years of retirement, individuals who accumulated less than
$200,000 in non-housing assets before retirement had spent down (at the median)
about one-quarter of their assets. The drawdown pattern was similar for retirees
with assets between $200,000 and $500,000, and only 12 percent for those with
$500,000 or more.
The study pointed to annuity income from pensions and Social Security as key
reasons for this - people simply adjust their spending where they can to match
what is coming in, and hang on to savings to meet emergency needs.
Social Security is especially critical for lower- and middle-income households,
since the program’s design replaces a higher percentage of pre-retirement
income. “Social Security provides a great foundation," said Sarah Holden, senior
director, retirement and investor research, at the Investment Company Institute.
But that approach faces threats. Defined-benefit pensions are disappearing
rapidly in the private sector and Social Security is becoming less valuable over
time due to the gradual increase in the age when full retirement benefits are
available, which was set in motion by reforms enacted in 1983.
The big picture: 10 ten years after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, retirement
security in the United States is a tale of two realities. The affluent have
recovered just fine, while lower- and middle-class households face a very
uncertain retirement.
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)
(Reporting and writing by Mark Miller in Chicago Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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