wsj-article-webview-generator-prod.sc.onservo.com Open in urlscan Pro
3.215.120.62  Public Scan

URL: https://wsj-article-webview-generator-prod.sc.onservo.com/webview/WP-WSJ-0001253901?adobe_mc=TS=1696382315|MCMID=71964198356958110868674346636272789131|MC...
Submission: On October 04 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

 * Personal Finance


MILLENNIALS ON BETTER TRACK FOR RETIREMENT THAN BOOMERS AND GEN X


MAKING SAVING FOR RETIREMENT THE DEFAULT OPTION PROVES TO BE A BOON FOR NEST
EGGS

Millennials are saving more and earlier largely because contributing to a 401(k)
became the default in many plans. Photo: iStock
By Anne Tergesen
Oct. 3, 2023 9:00 am ET
Share


Text



Millennials are on track to surpass their elders in one key source of financial
security: retirement savings.

While the generation born in the 1980s and 1990s has lagged behind prior
generations when it comes to homeownership and earnings, new data suggests they
are saving more for retirement. By the time older millennials now earning a
median salary reach retirement, Vanguard estimates, they will be able to replace
almost 60% of their preretirement income with Social Security and savings from
sources including their 401(k)s and individual retirement accounts. 

Gen Xers and the youngest baby boomers with median earnings are, by contrast,
likely to replace about half of their paychecks in retirement.

What changed? Millennials are saving more and earlier largely because
contributing to a 401(k) became the default in many plans. Unlike baby boomer
and Gen X workers, many of whom delayed joining 401(k) plans, millennials were
often automatically enrolled earlier in their careers. While those who are swept
into plans can opt out if they don’t want to save for retirement, few do. 

MILLENNIALS ARE SAVING ENOUGH TO REPLACE MORE INCOME IN RETIREMENT


Early millennials (ages 37-41)

Generation X (49-53)

Late baby boomers (61-65)

Spending

needs

Income percentile: 25th

Median income: $22,000

96%

64%

63

64

Income percentile: 50th

Median income: $42,000

83%

58%

52

50

Income percentile: 70th

Median income: $61,000

68%

66%

53

51

Income percentile: 95th

Median income: $173,000

43%

85%

75

63

Early millennials (ages 37-41)

Generation X (49-53)

Late baby boomers (61-65)

Spending

needs

Income percentile: 25th

Median income: $22,000

96%

64%

63

64

Income percentile: 50th

Median income: $42,000

83%

58%

52

50

Income percentile: 70th

Median income: $61,000

68%

66%

53

51

Income percentile: 95th

Median income: $173,000

43%

85%

75

63

Note: 2019 dollars


Source: Vanguard Group


As a result, “the retirement savings picture is getting stronger with each
passing generation,” said Fiona Greig, global head of investor research and
policy at Vanguard Group, which released research on Tuesday comparing the
retirement prospects of older millennials, ages 37 to 41, to Gen Xers, 49 to 53,
and younger baby boomers, 61 to 65.

The 401(k) might be the backbone of the nation’s private retirement savings
system, but even its fans say it can fall short of helping people save enough,
in part because it exposes workers to big drops in the stock market and allows
them to treat their nest eggs like rainy-day funds.

For those with access to 401(k) plans, especially early in their careers, the
widespread adoption of automatic enrollment into target-date funds and automatic
savings rate increases is helping younger workers get on track, according to
Vanguard.

Among the 1,700 employers that use Vanguard’s 401(k) services, nearly 60%
automatically enroll new hires, up from 10% in 2006, when Congress passed a law
encouraging the practice. Many plans that auto-enroll also automatically raise
workers’ savings rates, typically by 1 percentage point a year, until hitting a
threshold, such as 10% of pay.

Kenneth Adams, 34, said that when he graduated from college in 2012 and began
working as an engineer at a technology company, his employer automatically
enrolled him in the 401(k) plan at 3% of pay.

“I wasn’t thinking about retirement at all,” said the Austin, Texas, resident.
“They sent me this letter saying they were going to auto-enroll me, and I said,
‘OK, I’ll do what it says to do,’” said Adams, who increased his 401(k) savings
rate to 12% in 2014 after building an emergency savings account. 

“There’s not that much financial education in college, which is why automatic
enrollment is helpful,” he said. “It gives you a default savings option until
you educate yourself on what the 401(k) can do for you.”

Even with automatic enrollment, Vanguard’s research indicates that most American
workers aren’t saving enough to keep up with the spending typical of today’s
retirees. 

The exception is workers with incomes in the top 5% of the population, who in
all three generations save significantly more than they are likely to spend.
Millennials in that category, for example, are on track to replace 85% of their
income in retirement.

Millennials who earn $61,000 are also very close to being on track to cover
their projected spending needs in retirement, according to Vanguard. Baby
boomers and Gen Xers with similar incomes face more significant savings
shortfalls.

Lower-income workers across all three generations are likely to end up with the
greatest retirement shortfalls, according to Vanguard. They are also more likely
to have a job that doesn’t come with a 401(k) plan, said Greig. 

Vanguard’s results are broadly consistent with findings from other research.

A 2021 study by Boston College’s Center for Retirement Research found that
millennials in their mid-30s are catching up to where older generations stood at
similar ages on measures including earnings and rates of homeownership. But,
since millennials have more student-loan debt, they are still behind in overall
wealth accumulation.

Write to Anne Tergesen at anne.tergesen@wsj.com

Recommended
Heard on the Street


WALL STREET THINKS AMERICA’S HOMES ARE OVERVALUED

By Carol Ryan
October 3
Latin America


ECUADOR WAS A RETIREMENT PARADISE FOR AMERICANS. THEN THE DRUG GANGS ARRIVED.

By Ryan Dubé | Photographs by Andrés Yépez for The Wall Street Journal
October 3
Politics


KEVIN MCCARTHY OUSTED AS HOUSE SPEAKER IN HISTORIC VOTE

By Kristina Peterson, Siobhan Hughes and Katy Stech Ferek
October 3
Property Report


TOUGHER RETURN-TO-OFFICE POLICIES ARE NO REMEDY FOR HALF-EMPTY BUILDINGS

By Peter Grant
October 2
Personal Finance


MILLENNIALS ON BETTER TRACK FOR RETIREMENT THAN BOOMERS AND GEN X

By Anne Tergesen
October 3