daypart said:And I agree that the 55+ folks who live in my neighborhood haven't stopped spending. They go golfing, take cruises and buy new vehicles every couple of years. My vehicles don't get replaced as often as theirs do and I've never been golfing in Texas or gone on a cruise... I've got kids' college tuition to pay. ;Dfredcantu said:The 55+ crowd has more than 20 years left in them on average. And it's not like people stop spending money when they reach 55.BTW-- When everyone's 401K tanked in the economic crisis my parents were just fine. They had put all of their money into something called "savings" which was unaffected.
However there are huge financial changes happening with the 55+ crowd, none of them positive.
We have a tendency to look at 55+ and retirees as living well. But that was the pre-2008 mentality. The parents of Baby Boomers--what I'll call the "POBBS"--lived in the same house for decades and paid off the mortgage, while seeing home prices soar. The POBBS also worked at the same job for most of their lives and had generous pensions for retirement, often enabling them to leave the workforce in their mid to late 50's. The POBBS were also part of one of the biggest economic run-ups in history.
However, the POBBS "savings" have indeed been affected, as they are currently earning NOTHING with historically low interest rates. Home prices have dropped, resulting in lower equity. And those late-in-life medical bills (which can very quickly wipe out savings) are lurking. Might want to dig deeper and find out if the POBBS are really doing that well, or just piling up debt.
Baby Boomers will see a different reality in their later years: Pensions are disappearing or nonexistent. The cost of putting kids through college is obscene. The 401k's got clobbered. Savings pay nothing. Credit card debt is through the roof. The job market stinks if you are past 50--good luck getting a new job that pays what your last job did, as you are tossed to the curb in favor of younger and cheaper workers--or your job is now in China or India.
Read the financial news these days, and there is one overwhelming theme: Baby Boomers are woefully unprepared for retirement, having saved too little and borrowed too much. Not a formula for big spending that radio advertisers would be after.