With each passing year, Americans are getting less ready for the future.
That's the unsettling conclusion of a
Given the tumult of the past three years — including the COVID-19 pandemic, a bear market and record inflation — some experts say the savings gap is understandable.
"American savers continue to navigate through turmoil and uncertainty today," Rita Assaf, Fidelity's vice president of retirement, said in an email interview. "The decline in preparedness is being driven by two primary factors: People are saving less and investing more conservatively, which are natural reactions during a challenging financial environment."
After surveying 3,569 Americans in the summer of 2022, Fidelity found that more than half — 52% — will need to make "modest to significant adjustments" to their retirement lifestyle if they don't start saving more. In particular, baby boomers (born 1946-1964) and millennials (born 1981-1996) are saving at lower rates than they did in 2020 — boomers were down 2.2%, while their children's generation was down 0.2%.
And this report is far from an outlier. A study by the personal finance website
Why are so many Americans falling behind? More than anything else, Fidelity blames the bumpy economy, which for the past 15 months has been marked by historic inflation and a volatile stock market. In that context, some financial advisors were not shocked by the study's findings.
"It is not surprising that Americans are behind on their retirement savings," said Jay Zigmont, a certified financial planner and the founder of
But other factors played a role as well. Here are some of the biggest reasons retirement readiness is in decline: