Debt in Retirement Affects Confidence

Only half of retirees with debt are confident they will be able to live the lifestyle they want, but 70% of retirees without debt are confident.

Americans think it is bad thing for those in retirement to be carrying debt, the LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute found in a survey.

However, data from the New York Fed Consumer Credit Panel indicates that those between the ages of 65 and 80 increased their debt load by 40% between 2003 and 2015.

The LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute found that 51% of retirees with debt are confident they will be able to live the lifestyle they want, but for retirees without debt, that soars to 70%.

Sixty-six percent of Americans view a mortgage held during one’s working years as “good” debt, but only 40% think this is true for those in retirement. Two-thirds (66%) of Americans do not think it is a good idea for people to carry mortgage debt into retirement.

LIMRA also discovered that Government Accountability Office (GAO) data shows that the number of student loan borrowers 65 or older rose 385% between 2005 and 2015. In that period of time, the amount of student loan debt people in this age group carry ballooned from $2 billion to nearly $22 billion. Retirees who default on federal student loan debt can see their Social Security payments partially garnished. In fact, GAO found that in 2015, 5% of those 65 and older are facing this reality.

The LIMRA survey found that 81% think having student loan debt in retirement is a negative. Seventy percent also think that it is unwise for a retiree to be carrying credit card debt. LIMRA’s survey is discussed in a recent blog on its website here

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TRIVIAL PURSUITS: What Is the Longest Recorded Case of Chronic Hiccups?

We’ve heard stories about people who’ve gotten a chronic case of hiccups.

What is the longest recorded case of chronic hiccups?

 

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The longest recorded case of the hiccups was 68 years long. From 1922 to 1990, a U.S. man named Charles Osborne continuously hiccupped from 20 to 40 times every minute. Osborne reportedly first experienced the record-breaking case of hiccups in 1922 when he fell down while attempting to weigh a 350 pound hog before butchering it.

 

Some reports say Osborne may have damaged the area of his brain stem that is responsible for controlling the spasms of the diaphragm that cause hiccups. One year before his death at age 97, Osborne’s hiccups suddenly stopped.
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