Planning to Retire

Survey: Americans Want Pensions Back

By Emily Brandon

Posted: May 4, 2009

Americans with shrunken nest eggs are feeling nostalgic for pensions. About half of those without a pension (55 percent), say the old-fashioned retirement plan would ease their money worries, according to a National Institute on Retirement Security survey. However, not all workers with pensions are sleeping soundly. Only about 65 percent of Americans with a pension are confident that the payout will be there at retirement.

Since traditional pensions aren’t likely to make a comeback in the near future, the survey also asked what workers are looking for in a retirement plan. The most desired features are portability (88 percent), followed by an employer contribution (84 percent), continuation of payments for a spouse after death (79 percent), and a regular check that cannot be outlived (79 percent), the telephone survey of 801 Americans age 25 or older by Mathew Greenwald & Associates and the National Institute on Retirement Security found. Respondents were less interested in managing investments (50 percent) and having an employer foot the entire bill (48 percent).

The number of workers with traditional pensions has been declining steadily for 2 decades. About 28 percent of workers consider a pension that pays out benefits for life to be a major source of retirement income, down from 46 percent in 1998 and 57 percent in 1988, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute. More people are expected to rely on their 401(k) (42 percent) and Social Security (32 percent).

Tell us, what are you looking for in a retirement plan?

Pensions

Most countries offer a more realistic social security than ours, the UK is the only other major economy who is cheaper. Social security pays about 35-40% of your pre retirement income many countries offer around 60%, a more realistic figure. That coupled with half of your 401k purchasing an immediate annuity should yield you 75-90% of your pre-retirement income with $100-150k left in the market for growth in your IRA.

Loren of CA @ May 12, 2009 12:22:44 PM

Pensions Can Be an Evil Lie

and worse than no pension at all. The reason is you are told for your entire working life (35-40 years) that you will get a pension and so you plan for that. Then the company is allowed to reneg when the economy gets tight. Too late to make an adjustment. It would be far better for companies to have never "offered" any pension at all. Shame on me for believing what we were told.

Screwed in Detroit of MI @ May 11, 2009 07:28:08 AM

Capitalism is wonderful

There is a national pension plan - it's called social security.

Capitalism is a good thing. It is good so long as the vast majority of society is honest. The problem we are having now, is that we have adopted too many cultural 'values' from the south. Where the vast majority of people (think 1950s) were hard working, tax paying people - that is not the case anymore. Today's culture is one of trying to take advantage of the system, to avoid work, to avoid paying fair share of taxes. Take a look at the majority of the people who do these things, and you will find they are not the same people that represented the majority of the country 50 years ago. We are sliding into the cultural values of Africa & Mexico. Look to those nations today to see what our country will be like in 20 years. If you can - take everything you have and move to New Zealand, Australia, or some other country that will not have to deal with these problems in the next 50 years.

gooddog of CA @ May 08, 2009 22:40:23 PM

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Planning to Retire

Planning to Retire

Reporter Emily Brandon tells you how to get ready financially for retirement and to make your golden years the best they can be.

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