The world isn鈥檛 prepared for retirement, a new survey shows
Most online quizzes are relatively mindless, promising to reveal what vegetable, sandwich or rock band best represents your personality. That was not the case for a short online test given to more than 14,000 people in 15 countries this year. It revealed just how unprepared a good chunk of the world is for retirement.
The three-question test, given as part of The Aegon Retirement Readiness Survey 2018, measured how well people understand basic financial concepts. Many of the participants failed the quiz, with big potential consequences for their future security.Beyond the sobering lack of financial literacy, there was some rather curious data in Aegon鈥檚 annual survey, published Tuesday. For example, some 20 percent of workers surveyed in China envisioned spending retirement with a robot companion. But before we get to that, take a look at this question鈥攐nly 45 percent of people around the world got right:
Q. Do you think the following statement is true or false? 鈥淏uying a single company stock usually provides a safer return than a stock mutual fund.鈥
The possible answers? True, false, do not know and refuse to answer.
Sixteen percent of people got it wrong. 鈥淒o not know鈥 was chosen by 38 percent. In the U.S., 46 percent of workers got it right. Good for you, America. (The answer, in case you were wondering, is false.) It was an inflation question that had the highest percentage of wrong answers, however. More than 20 percent of workers didn鈥檛 grasp how higher inflation hurts their buying power. Given that declining health was the most-cited retirement worry, at 49 percent, and healthcare is an area (in the U.S., especially) with high cost-inflation, well, that makes the subject something older folks should have down cold.
The survey asked workers鈥攁bout 1,000 per country鈥攚hat global trends would affect their retirement plans. 鈥淩eduction in government retirement benefits鈥 was the most popular answer worldwide, chosen by 38 percent globally; in America, it was 26 percent. The countries most worried about cuts to government benefits? Brazil and Hungary, at about 53 percent.Concern with developing Alzheimer鈥檚 or dementia was cited by 33 percent globally. The highest percentage of people citing it as a worry were in Spain, at 53 percent. In the U.S., 31 percent were worried about it.Across the board, though, workers didn鈥檛 seem to recognize the huge impact that basic changes in the labor force, technology and the climate will probably have on their retirement plans, said Catherine Collinson, president of the nonprofit Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies and executive director of The Aegon Center for Longevity and Retirement.
鈥淚t makes me wonder about the extent to which people are naive about the magnitude of the disruption in our world, and the level of change that has not only occurred, but is imminent,鈥 said Collinson. 鈥淚s it that people don鈥檛 see it coming, or is it so overwhelming that people are in denial?鈥
Many workers may well be in denial about how long they can actually work. The survey found workers generally plan to retire around age 65. 鈥淭he sobering reality is that 39 percent of retirees globally retired sooner than planned,鈥 according to the report. 鈥淥f those, 30 percent stopped working earlier than they had planned for reasons of ill health, and 26 percent due to unemployment/job loss.鈥滱nd those robots? The survey asked about 鈥渁ging friendly modifications or devices鈥 people envisioned having in their homes. Thirty-five percent of workers in India, 34 percent of workers in Turkey and 18 percent in the U.S. figured aging could include video monitoring devices. Then there are the robots, which 20 percent of Chinese workers see coming in retirement, compared with 6 percent of American workers.
The report is intended as a call to action, said Collinson. Recommendations include working financial literacy into educational curriculums, promoting a more positive view of aging and allowing universal access to retirement savings arrangements.
With the traditional 鈥渟ocial contract鈥 between government, employers and individuals crumbling, 鈥渢he sooner we roll up our sleeves and get to work, the sooner we will be able to identify and implement solutions,鈥 she said. Whether that鈥檚 in public-private partnerships or implementing more findings from the field of behavioral finance, 鈥渋naction is really the enemy.鈥 — Bloomberg


