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Baby Boomers Count Down to Retirement
Baby Boomers Count Down to Retirement
U.S. Treasury's Go Direct Campaign Launches Pledge Drive to Spur Direct
Deposit for Social Security Benefit Payments
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 /PRNewswire/ -- As America's oldest baby boomers
start counting down to retirement, a new government survey shows they are
on the upswing in terms of financial savvy -- nearly twice as likely as
today's seniors to bank and pay bills online. Yet despite their financial
sophistication, one in four boomers still gets paid with old-fashioned
paper checks, a trend that's particularly entrenched with those closest to
retirement age (51-60 years old).
The national survey, sponsored by the U.S. Department of the Treasury
and Federal Reserve Banks on behalf of the Go Direct campaign, coincides
with a yearlong "Countdown to Retirement" pledge drive to encourage baby
boomers preparing to head into retirement to choose direct deposit once
they start collecting Social Security benefits.
"Direct deposit is a long-standing priority for Treasury, because it's
safer and easier for consumers than paper checks," said Treasury Fiscal
Assistant Secretary Donald Hammond. "With the anticipated surge in baby
boomer retirements in the coming years, we must encourage Social Security
recipients to sign up for direct deposit. There are significant benefits,
in terms of safety and security, for the recipients and considerable cost
savings for American taxpayers," Hammond said.
Boomers gearing up for retirement urged to use direct deposit
One year from now, the oldest of America's 77 million baby boomers --
born between 1946 and 1964 -- will turn 62, becoming eligible for Social
Security retirement benefits. Go Direct, a national campaign aimed at
increasing direct deposit use among existing Social Security recipients,
works with national and local partners across the country to convert check
payments to direct deposit.
"AARP strongly recommends direct deposit for Social Security benefits,
and encourages people who are retiring to sign up for it," said John
Rother, Group Executive Director of Policy and Strategy at AARP. "We stand
behind choices and solutions that provide security, protection and
empowerment for our members. Direct deposit makes good sense any way you
look at it."
Boomers self-assured heading into retirement
The poll showed that in many ways, boomers are confident going into
their retirement.
-- While current indicators show the national savings rate is declining,
the poll showed that only 16 percent of baby boomers say all or most of
their future retirement income will come from Social Security. In
comparison, twice as many (31 percent) existing retirees say Social
Security makes up all or most of their income.
-- Boomers also say they are more likely to wait to collect their Social
Security retirement benefits. About one in seven (16 percent) boomers
who are not yet retired plans to start collecting Social Security at
age 62, compared to a third (34 percent) of current retirees who
started collecting benefits at that age.
-- Seventy percent of boomers who are not yet retired plan to pay greater
attention to controlling their personal finances when they do retire,
compared with 64 percent of today's retirees.
Mixed results for financial know-how
The poll also showed that nearly half (47 percent) of all boomers who
have bank accounts use online banking, virtually the same as younger
respondents (48 percent) and nearly double the number of people age 61 or
older (24 percent).
However, a major exception is direct deposit, where boomers
significantly lag older respondents. Twenty-five percent of boomers say
they receive their wages, salary or other regular payments by paper checks,
compared with just 13 percent of respondents age 61 or older. In addition,
40 percent of baby boomers who are unlikely to start using direct deposit
in the next year say they don't trust or like direct deposit for a variety
of reasons.
Yet even within the baby boomer population, there are disparities. The
survey found that while nearly all boomers say they have a checking or
savings account (94 percent), older boomers (ages 51-60) lag younger ones
(ages 42-50) in moving into the electronic age. Older boomers fall behind
younger baby boomers in use of online banking (36 percent to 56 percent).
In addition, older boomers are less likely to enroll in direct deposit
within the next year, compared to boomers overall (18 percent to 30
percent).
To help people currently receiving Social Security and other federal
benefits sign up for direct deposit of their federal benefits, Go Direct
offers a toll-free number, (800) 333-1795 and two Web sites,
http://www.GoDirect.org (English) and http://www.DirectoASuCuenta.org
(Spanish).
Baby boomers who are interested in taking the Countdown to Retirement
pledge and learning how their attitudes about retirement compare with the
national average can visit the Go Direct Web site and click on Countdown to
Retirement.
These results are of a nationally representative telephone survey of
1,003 adults, age 18 and over, conducted October 23 - November 12, 2006, by
KRC Research. The margin of error for the overall study is +/- 3.1 percent
at the 95 percent confidence level.
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