June 14th, 2008 |
 Baby Boomers as a group stand to inherit trillions from our parents. |
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Many Baby Boomers, the group of us born between 1946 and 1964 and the largest generation in U.S. history, may have been lulled into a sense of complacency by reports that we as a group stand to inherit trillions from our parents.
But economists who have spent a lot of time researching the transfer of wealth from one generation to the next (intergenerational transfers) reached this wake-up call of a conclusion: the Baby Boomer Generation should not expect to inherit much, if anything, from our parents. This emerging picture is confirmed by an AARP study, "Baby Boomers Envision their Retirement, An AARP Segmentation Analysis," which found that, "Most boomers will receive a small inheritance, if they get anything at all."
In fact the average inheritance received in 2001 amounted to $48,000, according to AARP, a nice enough figure, but not one to base a comfortable lifestyle on. The really large payouts appear to be reserved for those already at the upper end of the economic scale. When measured as a percentage of wages, we will receive roughly the same amount of inheritance as their parents did. Not only will inheritances represent very minor additions to Boomers retirement resources, but also their distribution across the recipient population is also likely to be highly unequal. This substantially negates the view that inheritances will redress the shortfall in Baby Boomers retirement assets.
So, what happened to Baby Boomers windfall of as much as $136 trillion that we were supposed to inherit? While it's true that Baby Boomers parents had indeed built up sizable nest eggs over the last 50 years, longer life expectancies, soaring health care costs, long–term care costs, and recently the poor economy have chipped away at these nest eggs, reducing our chances that we will inherit enough to live by our BABY Boomers standards.
Baby Boomers retirement will also be vastly different from our parents. We expect to remain more active, work longer, and travel more and live longer than our parents' generation - therefore expectations are that to maintain our Baby Boomer retirement lifestyle expectations, it will cost us more than our parents. For us, retirement is more a lifestyle transition than an end in itself. To maintain our standard of living in retirement, conventional wisdom has held that retirees need roughly 65–75 percent of their pre–retirement income, and this figure is likely to increase to 80 or 90 percent as people are living longer and staying more active than in generations past.
The bad news is, Baby Boomers should expect very little in the way of wealth transfer from their parents and we are likely to need more money in retirement than we might be thinking.
The good news is, there's still time for most Baby Boomers to proactively plan and organize our finances so that we may enjoy a secure and fulfilling retirement. JUST FOR BABY BOOMERS: Share your experiences, remembrances and opinions about "Baby Boomers as a group stand to inherit trillions from our parents." with other Baby Boomers on our "Baby Boomer Forum"
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| Article by:
Dean Burns
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