Retiring during Economic Booms could cause
Financial Hardships for Retirees
October
3, 2012— The recent economic downturn and
volatile financial markets have drastically
reduced the retirement accounts of many
current and future retirees. In a new study,
a University of Missouri financial expert
has found that many Americans choose to
retire when the economic markets are
peaking, an action that can, ironically,
cause major problems for the long-term
financial stability of retirees.
“Potential retirees often will first meet
their targeted retirement savings goals
during an up market and will be tempted to
retire at that point,” said Rui Yao, an
assistant professor of personal financial
planning in the College of Human
Environmental Sciences at MU.
“The problem with this strategy is that the
economy runs in cycles, meaning that after a
peak, the market will take a downturn.
People who have retired shortly before an
economic downturn run a serious risk of
losing a significant portion of their
retirement savings, which will shorten the
longevity of their retirement income. This
could result in many retirees outliving
their retirement savings and facing
financial hardships toward the end of their
lives.”
Yao recommends that potential retirees hold
off on retiring immediately upon reaching
their target savings goals, particularly
during an economic boom. She says that
potential retirees should retire during an
economic downturn, as long as they have
saved enough to be comfortable. That way,
she says, once the markets recover,
retirees’ savings will increase above their
initial target goals, which will create an
adequate financial cushion for future
economic downturns.
In the study, which was published in the
Journal of Personal Finance and funded by a
grant from Prudential Insurance Company of
America, Yao examined data from the Health
and Retirement Study, which is a national
biannual survey conducted by the University
of Michigan.
The study reviewed the financial and
retirement statuses of more than 4,000
households with retirement-aged Americans
from 1992 to 2008. Yao found that the
probability that retirement-eligible
Americans chose to retire increased as the
number of consecutive up market years
increased. Every one percentage increase in
market returns increased the probability of
retirement by more than two percent.
Yao also found that working Americans with a
retired spouse were more likely to retire
than all other household types, including
those with a working spouse and those
without a spouse. Yao says this trend could
also create potential financial problems.
“It makes sense that many married couples
would want to retire around the same time,”
Yao said. “However, if both spouses decide
to retire close to the end of an up market,
the household would have little to no
cushion should their retirement portfolios
be affected by an economic downturn.”
Ultimately, Yao believes these findings show
the need for retirement planners, employers,
and financial educators and practitioners to
help pre-retirees better understand the
challenges they face in order to reduce the
likelihood of financial problems after
retirement.
META TAGS:
CHOOSING TIME TO RETIRE,
RETIREMENT PLANNING, LONG-TERM FINANCIAL
STABILITY