From Helaine Olen writing for the Washington Post:
There are two schools of thought when it comes to how well Americans will fare in retirement. One says we are on the verge of a crisis, that the age of the 401(k) has left large numbers of us without sufficient money for our old age. A second group is more sanguine. They point out Americans spend less in retirement than when they worked, and claim the others are overreacting.
It’s increasingly looking like the chicken littles have it right. ...
The latest warning comes in the form of a research brief for the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College ...
[S]omeone born in 1945 has a better than half chance of living in a household where at least one person receives a pension. The number drops to about 25 percent for someone born a mere eight years later. By 2020, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, only 1 in 7 private-sector workers worked at a firm with access to a defined benefit plan. ...
[M]ost Americans are not putting enough of their own money away, and what they do save is often less than ideally invested. ...
So what’s the most likely fix coming out of Washington? Double down.
The Secure Act 2.0 passed the House this year in a bipartisan vote, with barely a whisper of dissent. It increases the amount of money people over age 62 can set aside in tax-advantaged retirement accounts, and ups the age at which they need to begin taking mandatory distributions from 72 to 75 — two things that will generally benefit only the wealthiest seniors. ...
It would be more helpful to buttress the Social Security Trust Fund and increase benefits, but there’s little action on that front. ...