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How to help employees prepare for retirement

Some of your employees may be supporting their grown children instead of saving for retirement.

Yes, you read that right.

According to a report by Merrill Lynch and Age Wave, U.S. parents spend $500 billion a year on their 18- to 34-year-old adult children – twice the amount they contribute to their retirement savings.

Seventy percent of adults between the ages of 18 and 34 received some sort of parental financial support in the last year, with over half of those between the ages of 30 and 34, the report states.

This is especially alarming because almost 25 percent of U.S. adults don't have any retirement savings or pension, and 64 percent of U.S. adults know they aren't adequately preparing for retirement, according to the 2018 Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households.

Parents supporting millennial children

The Merrill Lynch and Age Wave report found that 58 percent of millennials acknowledge that they could not afford their current lifestyle without the financial support of their parents. Another survey by CreditLoan shows that 87 percent of this age group have been broke in the past year.

What are parents paying for? The report shows that they aren't just helping their grown children with emergencies. They are covering:

●     Food/groceries: 60 percent

●     Cell phone: 54 percent

●     Car expenses: 47 percent

●     Education: 44 percent

●     Vacations: 44 percent

●     Rent/mortgage: 36 percent

●     Student loans: 27 percent

Enormous student loan debt

In addition to helping their children as adults, parents of millennials may have also taken out Parent PLUS government loans or private loans to pay tuition when their kids were in college.

Though the data on private loans is more difficult to assess, what we know about Parent PLUS Loans is staggering. Currently, 3.6 million parents owe $88.9 billion.

What does this mean for parents?

Most millennial parents are 55 or older and should be slowing down and preparing for retirement. However, in 2018, the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that those over the age of 55 made up almost half of the new hires for job gains that year.

What's the reason for such a large number of new hires for this age group? A recent Bankrate report shows that almost half have used retirement funds in order to help their children. To make up this new deficit, many parents plan to work beyond their retirement years.

The problem is that although the sentiment is good, the plan is not. Working beyond retirement may not be practical. Keep in mind that older adults:

  • Have more illnesses that could require them to stop working before making up the retirement fund deficit.
  • May need to stop working in order to care for an elderly spouse.
  • May no longer have the skills needed to work in their current occupation, leading them to take other jobs at lower wages.
  •  Have less time to make up the missing retirement funds.
  • Must begin taking money out of retirement funds by age 70.5.

Even though the Age Wave study shows that 82 percent of millennials say they plan to help their parents in retirement if needed, experts say that parents should focus on their own needs before helping out their adult children.

How employer financial wellness programs help

Financial wellness programs can help employees make appropriate decisions about their finances and retirement to help them stay on track. For example, they can learn how to:

  • Convert parent loans to another recipient
  • Refinance student loans to take advantage of good credit and lower interest rates
  • Find loans, scholarships, grants, and programs that can help their millennial child without dipping into their retirement fund
  • Determine the effect of removing money from a 401K or IRA before making that decision
  • Create a plan that allows them to remain financially sound while helping their children

By providing a financial wellness program, employers can help their employees nearing retirement make good decisions and help millennial employees get on a path to fiscal responsibility.

 

 

This article was written by C.J. Marwitz from BenefitsPro and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@newscred.com.

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