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Retirees Provide Insight for Retirement Planning Success
More than 90% of participants polled in BlackRock’s fourth annual retirement survey agreed they have something to learn from retirees (the majority of those polled were ages 60 to 69) about the choices they made in planning for retirement.
“’Successful’ retirees saved the maximum amount of money permitted by their respective 401(k) plans, they estimated their retirement income and planned for future income needs,” Chip Castille, managing director and head of BlackRock’s U.S. & Canada Defined Contribution Group, told PLANSPONSOR. “Participants should look at how these retirees were engaged with their 401(k) plan and how they made the most of it.”
The “lessons learned” by retirees include four main retirement planning regrets: not making the most of the 401(k) plan (13% of retirees reported doing so, and of those, 87% expressed regret); not enrolling in a retirement plan early enough (23% of retirees reported doing so, and of those, 90% expressed regret); not making a financial plan for saving for retirement early enough in their working life (27% of retirees reported doing so, and of those, 85% expressed regret); and not saving the maximum amount of money (27% of retirees reported doing so, and of those, 78% expressed regret).
According to the survey, 75% of retirees said they saved the maximum amount of money permitted by their 401(k) plan, versus 42% of participants who said they are saving the maximum.
Despite regrets, current retirees feel secure about their life in retirement. In fact, 94% of respondents feel optimistic about their life in retirement, 91% feel that their financial risk in retirement is under control and 91% feel that their financial future is secure.
Survey respondents reported that increased tenure and engagement with DC plans increases confidence for retirees and current participants. Retirees’ experience of retirement seems to be more positive than the expectations of current plan participants. More than half of retirees are confident they will have enough money to live comfortably in retirement, compared with a quarter of plan participants.
Castille said he thinks a few apparent and less-apparent factors play into why retirees’ experience seems more positive than participants’ expectations. “There [are] the obvious answers of secure income from traditional pensions and a more pessimistic view on the part of participants that social security will be there for them – but putting that aside for a moment, we believe part of it has to do with passing through phases of life,” he said.
As participants move through phases of life, they begin to maximize more options of a plan, Castille explained. They also have a more realistic view of their own savings and preparation as their retirement date draws near. “No one knows what retirement will be like until they’re actually there, so it’s natural to fear what we don’t know,” he added.
BlackRock Inc., in partnership with Boston Research Group, conducted three separate online surveys in March 2012 comprised of 1,035 retirees, 1,002 participants and 118 plan sponsors.