|
|
| |
 |
Is America Saving Enough?
Is America Saving Enough?
By Andy Barkate
A study done in 2004 by The American Savings Education Council found that only 48 percent of current workers have bothered to calculate how much money they’ll need to save by the time they retire. More disturbing is that 58 percent apparently had no idea or are just crossing their fingers and hoping they’ll have enough.
The same study found 58 percent of current workers are saving for retirement, but the amount of saving is insufficient, and in some cases grossly insufficient. Another statistic the survey found was that the average working family has saved a meager $25,000. In light of these stats, can society ever hope to accumulate enough to attain a comfortable retirement lifestyle?
The Commerce Department recently announced that the nation’s personal saving rate, calculated as a percentage of disposable (or after-tax) personal income, had fallen to a negative number for the first time since October 2001. The national savings rate fell to a negative 1.1 percent in July 2005, followed by a negative 0.7 percent in August.
What’s happening to savings in America? In the short-term (and prior to the impact of Katrina), the Commerce Department says consumers remained in a spending mood: personal expenditures rose 0.7 percent in real (or inflation-adjusted) dollars from June to July, and by another 0.9 percent in July.
But in the long-term, the recent declines serve as a reminder of how long the savings rate has been declining. After peaking in 1944 at 26.1 percent and dropping during the early post-World War years to 4.3 percent in 1947, the annual rate fluctuated within a narrower range until reaching a post-war high of 11.2 percent in 1982. From there it trended down, ending the 1990s at 2.4 percent, dropping to 1.8 percent in 2001 and 2004 and never exceeding 2.4 percent again. In the first half of 2005, the seasonally adjusted annual rate fell below 1 percent.
To understand what these figures mean, it is important to know how the Commerce Department defines personal saving: what’s left of employee pay check after taxes, self-employment income, rental income, personal interest and dividend income on assets, plus transfer payments (formerly classified as non-tax payments, these are payments by people to government including donations, fees, and fines), minus current taxes after subtracting personal outlays.
It excludes capital gains from sales of assets, which have been substantial in some years. According to the Commerce Department, “Saving from current income may be near zero or negative when outlays are financed by borrowing (including credit cards or home equity loans), by selling investments or other assets or by using savings from previous periods.”
By contrast, the Federal Reserve measures personal saving as the difference between households’ net acquisitions of assets (excluding cars and other consumer durables) and the net increase in their liabilities. It also excludes capital gains.
Whatever the differences, the long-term trend in personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income has been the same: down! From the early postwar low of 7 percent in 1949, it rose to the low double-digits and remained there with few exceptions through 1990’s 11.5 percent. It slipped in subsequent years, falling to a negative 0.7 percent in 2000—when the Commerce-basis rate was a positive 2.3 percent —and has remained in the low single digits since.
Do lower rates of household savings matter in the face of higher household debt, as some suggest? Not to Fed Governor Susan Schmidt Bies, she takes a “considerably more sanguine” view than those who are concerned that households “have become overextended and will need to rein in their spending.”
She explains the Fed analyses, “indicate that households in the top income quintile can account for nearly all of the decline in the aggregate savings rate since 1989 (when estimates of saving by income quintiles were first disseminated). “Given that these higher-income households have more financial resources to weather shocks, the significant decline in savings is less troublesome than if it had occurred in the lower part of the income distribution.”
Ms. Bies also noted that some analysts consider changes in net worth to be a more relevant measure of saving adequacy than the portion of current income set aside for saving. “In this regard, the picture of household saving looks more favorable than suggested by the saving rate,” she said.
At some point, the Bies said, consumers, who have passively relied on markets to raise the value of their assets, will need to set aside more of their earnings for investments to fund their future needs.
Addressing the personal saving rate’s impact on the economy, Fed vice-chairman Roger W. Ferguson, Jr., recently said that a near-term return to the average rates prevailing through the 1980s may not be needed. “In the aggregate, an economy needs to generate savings for two basic purposes—to invest in new plant and equipment with the aim of raising future consumption growth and to expand the residential housing stock,” he said. “As the growth rate of the labor force slows with the retirement of the baby boom generation, less investment will be required to equip each worker with the same amount of capital.”
Other economists point to the imbalances in the global economy as being unsustainable, and are less comfortable relying on asset bubbles and low mortgage rates to drive economic expansion.
Putting all studies and statistics aside. Where the rubber meets the road: are you personally on the right path? One must ask the question: Am I saving and investing enough to fund my retirement? A retirement which may last 20 to 30 years. When considering your pension income (which can be shaky, just ask any GM worker or retiree), Social Security income and personal savings and retirement plans, is there enough to last you and your spouse throughout retirement?
Andy Barkate is the President of California Retirement Plans, LLC a local investment and retirement planning firm with offices in Bakersfield, Lancaster and Ridgecrest. Your questions and comments are welcome at 800-914-6837 or e-mail at abarkate@calfinancial.com.
|  |
Post new Comment
This site does not allow anonymous comments. Registered members can login to participate. Registration is free and takes only a few seconds
|
 |
|
|