Why Boomers Will Retire More Comfortably Than Their Parents

This generation still has a lot to look forward to despite financial strains

By Matthew Bandyk

Posted: September 10, 2009

On the surface, the future looks bleak for baby boomers. The Center for Economic and Policy Research projects that the median baby boomer household lost 45 percent of its net worth between 2004 and 2009. So why does retirement expert Ken Dychtwald think that boomers' retirement will still have a high quality of life? Dychtwald is a psychologist and the author of 16 books on aging, including his latest, With Purpose: Going From Success to Significance in Work and Life. He argues that retirement for this generation will be so different from traditional retirement that maybe we'll need a new word to describe it.

[See 10 Places to Relive the '60s.]

Perhaps the big reason retirement is changing is that life spans are changing. Increases in obesity and heart disease have not gotten in the way of continual increases in life expectancy over the past 100 years. In 1950, when many of the baby boomers were born, the average 65-year-old was expected to live an additional 13.9 years, according to the Centers for Disease Control. In 2006, a 65-year-old was expected to live 18.5 years longer. Dychtwald says this doesn't mean our health is improving; it's more a shift in attitude. "When our moms and dads reached their 65th or 70th birthday, they felt like they were in the ninth inning, and they were quite happy. Now, boomers look around and see 80-year-old newlyweds and 90-year-old marathon runners," he says.

[Also see Slide Show: Great Places for Entrepreneurs to Retire.]

Many boomers will retire later than their parents did. To some, the delay might seem like a sign of declining living standards. Retiring early has long been a mark of success. "Now we're seeing a lot of questioning of whether 20 years of nonproductive leisure is affordable or even enjoyable. Somewhere between 60 and 65 percent of retirees don't like it at all," he says, arguing that we may see a period of semiretirement for many boomers—starting a business after ending a career, for example. At the same time, Dychtwald recognizes that for many boomers, going back to work will be a necessity. "It's a generation that grew up with such abundance that unfortunately, they have not been saving for a rainy day," he says. Even without the recession, retirement would have to be delayed for many. "The combination of the absence of savings and the strain on the entitlements are going to cause this generation to have a greater struggle than any generation since the 1930s and 40s."

However, greater financial strains don't necessarily mean a lower quality of life for retirees. Dychtwald says retirees have much to look forward to. "The boomers have such enormous demographic heft that as they migrate into maturity, nearly every provider of products and services—whether it's software, vitamins, shoes, cars—is going to realize that [boomers] are where the numbers are, and that's where the money is," he says. 

For decades, marketers have been targeting the 18-to-35 demographic with the "get them while they're young" reasoning. But Dychtwald says the country's changing demographics means the logic no longer holds up. "Increasingly today, we have 50-, 60-, and 70-year-olds who are trying new things. People at every age—particularly the boomers—want to try a new car, want to visit a new Web site, want to see new movies. You've got a lifetime of appetites for people who want to try new products."

What kind of products? Dychtwald sees new advancements specifically aimed at older Americans: information technology, for example, that could make it possible for nanotransmitters to monitor your state of health. Social networking is another area ripe for growth. "In terms of ability to continue learning, to share information about how to care for a parent, to connect with old friends—it has enormous potential. Somebody could come up with the idea of an Internet cemetery and make a fortune," Dychtwald says.

A host of new products will be coming down the pike, he adds, but the new consumerism won't be about crass materialism. The future for baby boomers might be more about creating better relations with loved ones than acquiring fancy gadgets. "One of the weaknesses of the previous retirement model has been that we asked very little of retirees, and the majority are bored. I believe the boomers will trigger a revolution in volunteering, in entrepreneurship. This generation will not go off to the sidelines," Dychtwald says.

worry

I think most Baby Boomers will always feel insecure, worry about financial matters. There is more to life than financial considerations and the sense of security does not always translate to monetary matters. Security seems nebulous to me. There are so many aspects to it, financial, national, health. Do the best you can with what you have. I do see many boomers starting new careers after retirement. Bobby Jones the golfer was quoted as saying "play it as it lies" when asked how he dealt with his health issues. Right now I am worried about whether to retire now or continue to seek work, am currently unemployed

Paul R Skidmore of MD @ Sep 22, 2009 11:12:58 AM

Boomer Retirement

Wow...Semiretirement? don't you mean putting on an orange apron at Home Depot or becoming a Walmart employee, or getting involved in some sort of multilevel Marketing system???

Get real. Your article misses the point. Cris from Colorado seems to have nailed it though. What we are all concerned about down here in the trenches is 'Security'. Our parents had it in retirement, but by all indications '90% of the 'me generation' boomers won't. Why? There's no 'next big thing' to fuel our economy, that's why. First it was WWII, then the boom after when N. America had the only functioning infrastructure left and could dominate world commerce. Guess what? After 50-60 years, everybody caught up and we let our manufacturing base erode. Now the credit crunch and decline in asset values due to less income across the board. We won't be as secure as our parents generation and that sercurity and peace of mind is important to enjoying life. With no 'next big thing to fuel our economy I'm afraid we'll lose our hold on the ability to pay ourselves the many multiples about the 'world' wage level that we have been doing ot fuel our standard of living for the last 50-60 years. I hope I'm wrong, and there is a new "next big thing' right around the corner. But if not, most of us boomers will be 'insecure' until we pass from this planet.

Bruce of CA @ Sep 16, 2009 11:04:35 AM

Boomer Retirement

Let's face it. We 'boomers' all got duped into spending everything all the time to keep up the Jones, or just to fuel our insecurities. We didn’t save (our mistake…) We needed the latest and the greatest 'everything', now. Madison Ave. played to our pride all our lives and we were brainwashed into believing that we could 'buy' our way to happiness. WRONG! Cheap credit offered with no real emphasis on saving. Now, the levels of income for those coming up behind us aren't enough to cash us out of our overvalued homes where a substantial amount of our real 'asset value' used to be. What are we supposed to do now? With our portfolios decimated, our houses worth minimum 20% less that 3-4 years ago and real incomes dropping how are we going to find ‘security’ in a the age of consumerism? ? 'refinance' again? Oh, yeah, that boat left the dock for the last time, along with the majority of our manufacturing base. Party's over for 90% of us boomers and we know it. We WILL NOT have a more comfortable ‘retirement experience’ than out parents because we won’t feel ‘secure’. We are big boys and big girls and we know the score. It sucks, but it is, what it is. Simple as that.

Chris of CO @ Sep 16, 2009 10:50:44 AM

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