What is ‘Peak 65’ and Why Should Pre-Retirees Care?

Peak 65

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“Peak 65” is a term used to describe the point in time when more Americans will turn age 65 than at any point in history, which will occur in 2024, according to The Alliance for Lifetime Income. The annuity advocacy organization released a new report on Tuesday that details how underprepared millions of baby boomers are for today’s retirement realities as the date approaches.

The Peak 65 Generation—Creating A New Retirement Security Framework, authored by Jason Fichtner, a senior lecturer at Johns Hopkins University, finds that the fundamental problem is that the three-legged stool, which once served as a model for retirement income security—pensions, Social Security and personal savings—is wobbly at best and near collapse at worst.

Fichtner concludes that a new framework is needed to address the current realities that put as many as 50% of households at risk of not having enough money to maintain their standard of living in retirement—and it must include a focus on how protected income can help to provide the security necessary to maintain a given standard of living in retirement.

While 65 has long-been considered retirement age, most Americans begin retiring sooner. As the number of people approaching Peak 65 grows, the reality is that the country is already experiencing a retirement boom.

COVID-19 and Peak 65

Economic insecurity is also on the rise, as the COVID-19 pandemic caused an estimated 4,000,000 workers prematurely retiring, according to Fichtner’s analysis.

Further, according to Alliance research, nearly half (47%) of all retirees retired as the result of employer circumstances, not because they reached a certain age or savings goal, nor because they wanted to pursue hobbies.

Call for collective action

Meeting the challenges presented by Peak 65 will require collective action on the part of all stakeholders in the retirement ecosystem. In consideration of this urgent moment, the Alliance is called for the following responses to meet Americans’ retirement income needs:

Employers

Financial professionals

Public policymakers

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