Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Baby Boomers Face Housing Crunch

AARP reports that half of Baby Boomers doubt they'll ever be able to retire. Many Baby Boomers are nervous about retirement. The Great Recession took a heavy toll on many investments and former financial goals don't seem as attainable in some cases. A recent article from the Career Institute's newsletter is pretty eye-opening and frightening. According to the article, many Baby Boomers (of which I am one) will struggle to keep their homes. Many will enter retirement with less savings and more debt than previous generations. Many will not have their homes paid for by retirement and that debt alone will account for more than 30% of their retirement income. Over the next decade, Boomers 65 and older living on less than $15,000 a year is expected to increse by nearly 40%. Read below for the entire article...
America’s Baby Boomers are facing a serious housing crunch, with many expected to struggle to afford their homes come retirement.
By 2030, the number of adults age 65 and older will more than double to 73 million, according to a report by the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies and the AARP Foundation.
And many of these retirees will need to put so much of their income toward housing — more than 30% — that they will have to cut back on other expenses like transportation, medical care, even food, the report found.
A big part of the problem: many Baby Boomers will enter retirement with less savings and more debt than previous generations.
A growing number of seniors are carrying mortgage debt into retirement, with more than 70% of younger Boomers ages 50 to 64, and 40% of those age 65 and older still owing money on their home in 2010. Even worse, they owed even more money on their loans, which is putting many older Americans in a “financially precarious” position, the report found.
Meanwhile non-housing related debt among the 65-plus crowd climbed from an average of $4,300 in 1992 to $7,200 in 2010, mainly as a result of credit card and auto loan debt.
Adding to Boomers’ burdens, less money is expected to come in. Over the next decade, the number of households age 65 and older living on less than $15,000 a year — below the poverty level for a two person household in 2014 — is projected to grow by nearly 40%.
The authors of the report argue that the government isn’t doing enough to help low income seniors. In 2011, just one-third of low income seniors who were eligible for federal rental assistance received any assistance at all.
The report recommends a variety of fixes, including property tax relief for seniors, increased federal rental assistance and improved programs to help seniors “age in place” in their homes, instead of in costly institutions.

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