America's Seniors is proud to offer this broad selection of items that will add to the quality of life and gift giving, designed for the interests and needs of Seniors, family and caregivers.
Home Page Beauty  Apparel & Accessories  Automotive Books Camera & Photo Cell Phones &  Accessories Classical Music Video Games Computers DVD Electronics Health & Personal Care Jewelry Kitchen & Housewares Magazine Subscriptions Medical Music Musical Instruments Software Tools & Hardware Toys & Games VH

 

 Home Up Aging News Seniors Commentary California Report Caregiving_News.htm Community/Workplace Election 2012 'Smart Bombing' Diseases Fitness,Health Grandparents HealthCare Policy Hispanic Seniors Medicare News Prescription Drug News Resources, Links Rural Seniors Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups Safety & Security Seniors' Entertainment Seniors Relationships Social Security News The Virtual Family Travel News Veterans Tribute Privacy Statement Join Our Mailing List Aging Resources Store TSN Video News Rx for American Health New Page 12

 Home
Up
American Dream Poll
Annuity Matching
Assisting Vulnerable Seniors
Avoid Retirement Mistakes
Boomers Dole Out Cash
Boomers' Inheritance
Boomers Retiring
Boomer Retirement Dilemma
Boomer Retirement Report
Boomer Retirement Nightmare
Boomers Remain Uneasy
Boomer Venture Competition
Brooks Hines Realtor
Buying Power Loss
Californian Retirement
Cancer Bankruptcy Link
Cool Head Builds Wealth
Debt-Ridden Boomers
Delayed Retirement for Boomers
Do-it-Yourself Savings
Early Planning Key
Elderly Poverty
Envisioning Retirement
Fallling Economic Security
Fighting Financial Exploitation
Finance as Medicine
Financial Decision-Making
Funded Pensions Up
Funded Pension Drop
Gas Prices Cut Confidence
Holes in Retirement Plans
Insufficient Savings
Invest in Yoursel
Keep Boomers on Job
Late Bloomers' Tips
Late-Life Financial Planning
Life Insurance, Retirement
Married Couples Finances
Michigan Seniors' Aid
Michigan Seniors at Risk
Misleading Practices Protection
Money Trumps Age
Pension Funds Drop
Planning, Saving Importance
Recession Hits Hard
Recession Hurts Seniors
Reinvent Yourself
Renegotiated Pensions
Retirement
Reverse Mortgage News
Risky Payday Loans
Roth IRA Challenge
Save in Consumer Economy
Savings Decline
Selling a Business
Seniors' Business Resources
Seniors' Buying Power Dips
Shock Markets
Social Security Share
Spending the Inheritance
States Target Seniors
Tech Bill Paying Tips
Unaffordable Housing
U.S. Pension Funding
Workers Not Informed
2011 Financial Insecurity
Titles Confuse Seniors

 

Google

 

 

Web

TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

Share with friends, community with Add This! service above!
 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left 
 
Be the first of your friends to like this.

2012 Retirement Confidence Survey: Job Insecurity, Debt deep Retirement Confidence at historic lows; Outlook brighter for those who plan and save, says the Principal

March 17, 2012 -- A new survey says Americans' confidence in their ability to afford a comfortable retirement remains at historically low levels in the face of job uncertainty and financial insecurity.

To view the multimedia assets associated with this release, please click:http://www.multivu.com/mnr/54549-principal-financial-group-retirement-confidence-survey-job-insecurity-ebri

 

The 2012 annual Retirement Confidence Survey, released today by the nonpartisan Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) in Washington, and co-sponsored by the Principal Financial Group®, finds only 14 percent of Americans are very confident they will have enough money to live comfortably in retirement(1).  Workers with the most debt have the least confidence.

Current worries appear to overshadow long term planning. Forty-two percent of workers identify job uncertainty as the most pressing financial issue facing most Americans today. 

The percentage of those saving for retirement continues to decline, many report virtually no savings and investments and most workers have not even tried to calculate how much they need to save.

 

But the survey data show that retirement confidence levels are measurably higher (20 – 30 percent) among workers who've taken positive financial actions, including saving in an employer-sponsored plan, getting advice from a financial professional and calculating retirement savings needs.

"Especially in an uncertain economy, having a plan and taking action helps Americans focus on what they can control and builds a realistic sense of optimism about the future," said Greg Burrows, senior vice president of the Principal Financial Group, long-time underwriter of the Retirement Confidence Survey.

  "Working with a financial professional to set goals, and putting aside as much as possible, helps with short-term needs and paves the way for more security in the long term." 

This is the 22nd annual Retirement Confidence Survey, making it the longest-running annual survey of its kind in the nation. Among other key findings available on the EBRI website at www.ebri.org:

Little savings: Many workers report they have virtually no savings and investments. In total, 60 percent of workers report that the total value of their household's savings and investments, excluding the value of their primary home and any defined benefit plans, is less than $25,000.

Fewer saving: Two-thirds (66 percent) of workers report they and/or spouses have saved for retirement, a continuing decline from the 75 percent measured in 2009. Fifty-eight percent report currently savings versus 65 percent in 2009.

Workers' expected retirement age: In 1991, 11 percent of workers said they expected to retire after age 65, and by 2012 that has grown to 37 percent.

Retirees' experience: Regardless of retirement age expectations, half of current retirees surveyed say they left the work force unexpectedly due to health problems, disability, or changes at their employer, such as downsizing or closure.

The annual Retirement Confidence Survey is conducted by the nonpartisan Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) and Mathew Greenwald and Associates. The Principal Financial Group is among the more than two dozen organizations that provided funding for the survey. Full results are on the EBRI Website at www.ebri.org

 More information on savings tools and resources are online at www.principal.com and www.choosetosave.org

For more news and insights from The Principal, connect with us on Twitter at:http://twitter.com/ThePrincipal.

About the Principal Financial Group

The Principal Financial Group® (The Principal®)(2) is a global investment management leader including retirement services, insurance solutions and asset management. The Principal offers businesses, individuals and institutional clients a wide range of financial products and services, including retirement, asset management and insurance through its diverse family of financial services companies. Founded in 1879 and a member of the FORTUNE 500®, the Principal Financial Group has $335 billion in assets under management(3) and serves some 18 million customers worldwide from offices in Asia, Australia,Europe, Latin America and the United States. Principal Financial Group, Inc. is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol PFG. For more information, visit www.principal.com .

(1) Statistically equivalent to the low of 13 percent measured in 2011 and 2009           

(2) "The Principal Financial Group" and "The Principal" are registered service marks of Principal Financial Services, Inc., a member of the Principal Financial Group.         

(3) As of Dec. 31, 2011.    

SOURCE Principal Financial Group

 

 

Download our new Android Apps for RxforAmericanHealth.blog or TodaysSeniorsNetwork.  Load them directly onto your mobile device by opening your device, opening your browser and entering either todaysseniorsnetwork or rxforamerican's health in the search box, then, when the app icon appears,  click download, then after download, click install. Or, click here to install both apps directly from the web to your phone.

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
    

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us