Thesis advisor: Matthew S. RutledgeIn the past several decades, saving for retirement has significantly changed, with the large replacement of Defined Contribution for Defined Benefit plans, as well as the unreliability of Social Security given the aging population. This paper analyzes retirement wealth across three generational cohorts—Baby Boomers (1946-1964), Gen Xers (1965-1980), and Millennials (1981-2000)—in order to compare preparedness and determine whether or not younger cohorts have compensated for the future unreliability of other traditional retirement income sources. The results suggest that levels of retirement wealth do not significantly differ across cohorts at all age profiles. Therefore, younger generational cohorts have n...
The United States is facing a socioeconomic crisis as the Baby Boomer generation reaches retirement ...
Low returns on financial assets and increasing longevity mean saving for retirement is becoming more...
We compare wealth holdings across two cohorts of the Health and Retirement Study: the early Baby Boo...
This paper examines the composition and distribution of total wealth for a cohort of 51 to 61 year o...
The United States experienced an unprecedented financial crisis after 2007. This paper analyzes if r...
The United States experienced an unprecedented financial crisis after 2007. This paper analyzes if r...
The United States experienced an unprecedented financial crisis after 2007. This paper analyzes if r...
Assessing savings sufficiency requires detailed information on both potential retirement benefits an...
This paper explores the likely prevalence of hardship in old age for individuals now nearing retirem...
The purpose of the study conducted is to examine the saving habits of the baby boomer generation as ...
[Excerpt] As the leading edge of the baby boom approaches retirement age, policy makers and the publ...
High and rising US wealth inequality underscores the need to revisit a perennial concern in policy c...
Social, economic, demographic, and public policy shifts have made Millennial retirement security a p...
Examines how changing demographics and patterns in lifetime earnings, pension participation, and wea...
We compare the saving behavior of two cohorts: the Early Baby Boomers (EBB, age 51-56 in 2004) and t...
The United States is facing a socioeconomic crisis as the Baby Boomer generation reaches retirement ...
Low returns on financial assets and increasing longevity mean saving for retirement is becoming more...
We compare wealth holdings across two cohorts of the Health and Retirement Study: the early Baby Boo...
This paper examines the composition and distribution of total wealth for a cohort of 51 to 61 year o...
The United States experienced an unprecedented financial crisis after 2007. This paper analyzes if r...
The United States experienced an unprecedented financial crisis after 2007. This paper analyzes if r...
The United States experienced an unprecedented financial crisis after 2007. This paper analyzes if r...
Assessing savings sufficiency requires detailed information on both potential retirement benefits an...
This paper explores the likely prevalence of hardship in old age for individuals now nearing retirem...
The purpose of the study conducted is to examine the saving habits of the baby boomer generation as ...
[Excerpt] As the leading edge of the baby boom approaches retirement age, policy makers and the publ...
High and rising US wealth inequality underscores the need to revisit a perennial concern in policy c...
Social, economic, demographic, and public policy shifts have made Millennial retirement security a p...
Examines how changing demographics and patterns in lifetime earnings, pension participation, and wea...
We compare the saving behavior of two cohorts: the Early Baby Boomers (EBB, age 51-56 in 2004) and t...
The United States is facing a socioeconomic crisis as the Baby Boomer generation reaches retirement ...
Low returns on financial assets and increasing longevity mean saving for retirement is becoming more...
We compare wealth holdings across two cohorts of the Health and Retirement Study: the early Baby Boo...