In one of my first Money and You columns, I wrote about the alarming number of Americans who are ill-prepared for retirement. One of the statistics I mentioned was that about 60 percent of people age 45 or older have less than $100,000 in retirement savings, according to a 2007 Employee Benefit Research Institute study. It is a pretty scary figure when you consider just how much it costs to have a secure retirement.
My point was somewhat obvious: Retirement investing is an issue for a huge number of Americans, perhaps even most Americans. The inescapable reality is that today's workers must take responsibility for their retirement savings. In particular, they must take advantage of tax-advantaged retirement investing vehicles, including 401(k) and similar employer-sponsored plans, as well as IRAs and Roth IRAs. The decline in traditional defined-benefit pension plans and the inevitable changes in the Social Security system have put the responsibility for retirement squarely on the individual's shoulders.
Three recent surveys highlighted to me that the need to focus on this issue is even more pressing than we thought. For example, the 10th annual Black Investor Survey (arielmutualfunds.com/blackinvestor), co-sponsored by Ariel Mutual Funds and Charles Schwab, revealed that the need for retirement investment is especially acute among African-Americans. In fact, there is a significant gap between the savings and investing habits of blacks and whites.
As the "Black Paper" issued by the study's sponsors put it, "The results consistently show that blacks save less than whites of similar income levels and are less comfortable with stock investing." In fact, the median amount of money saved by the African-Americans surveyed was less than half that of white respondents ($48,000 vs. $100,000). For retirees, the figures are more startling: $73,000 vs. $210,000. Instead, members of the African-American community tend to invest in real estate and spend on secondary education at a higher rate than whites. Given these statistics, it isn't surprising that while 76 percent of the whites surveyed had invested in stocks or stock funds in 2007, only 57 percent of blacks did the same.
A second recent Schwab survey among people of the so-called Generation X, roughly defined as those born between 1964 and 1980, showed that nearly 45 percent say they have too much debt to even think about saving or investing. And more than a third think that they will be in debt for the rest of their lives. Finally, a recent Schwab study of investment advisers found that 61 percent of them say that having sufficient retirement savings is a constant concern of their clients.
What can we do?