Are You Financially Literate? Take the Quiz

401k, financial literacy, retirement, Quiz

How much do you know?

‘Fynenshal litiricee’ remains depressingly low, especially in the area of retirement income.

According to the just-released 2020 Retirement Income Literacy Survey from the American College of Financial Services, four in five older Americans fail to understand the basics of how to successfully plan for a financially secure retirement.

Retirees and pre-retirees displayed a lack of knowledge around awareness of income in retirement, basic investment management, and understanding of long-term care needs.

However, those with a written retirement plan in place reported feeling more prepared to navigate the COVID-19 pandemic than their counterparts did.

Similar to the College’s 2014 and 2017 surveys, retirement literacy in 2020 remains low overall, as the results showed a profound lack of both confidence in and knowledge of retirement income issues: eight in ten failed the 38-question retirement literacy quiz, and only a third consider themselves highly knowledgeable about planning for retirement income.

TAKE THE AMERICAN COLLEGE’S QUIZ HERE

Among the financial planning elements driving low scores on the quiz was consumers’ particularly low level of knowledge about preserving assets and sustaining income in retirement:

“Determining how much you can spend in retirement when you don’t know how long you will live or what market returns you will experience is complicated,” Wade Pfau, PhD, Professor of Retirement Income, at The American College of Financial Services, said in a statement. “Unfortunately, the task is even harder for Americans who do not recognize how to properly evaluate these risks in the first place, and who do not understand the lasting impact of a market downturn in the early years of retirement. The survey demonstrates that these retirees don’t fully understand the consequences a bad market can have on their long-term retirement prospects.”

Consumers also displayed a significant lack of knowledge when it comes to understanding investments, despite the fact that a majority self-report that they are at least moderately knowledgeable about investment management.

Long-term care is an afterthought

The survey found that only three in ten have a plan in place for how to fund long-term care needs and only one in four has some sort of long-term care insurance coverage.

Very worrying is the fact that most older Americans are split on whether they will even need long-term care insurance in the future:

Exit mobile version