Are Millennials’ Retirements ‘Doomed?’

Millennials have had a rough week of it, at least in the financial press.

First there was a report that they had established asset allocations that mirrored that of their grandparents (the respondents apparently never heard of a target-date fund). Then a separate survey that indicated they (70% of them, anyway) were ashamed to ask their parents for financial advice (we’ll set aside for a minute whether that would have been a good source), and then the pièce de résistance was a report that painted a pretty bleak retirement picture for a generation that “entered the workforce around the Great Recession, which began in late 2007, and experienced a difficult economy early in their careers. Now, they are confronting pandemic-related setbacks while trying to manage work-life balance.” 

Indeed, the only bright note for this group—identified as those born between 1981 and 1996 - was a report that said the retirement savings gap between genders in that demographic was a mere 23% (which, at $29,218 versus $23,715, doesn’t mean it’s adequate, but then we’re only talking about averages). 

Now, as a mid-range Boomer—who happens to be the parent of three Millennials—I can attest to the complexities of this generation of individuals, now said to be the majority of today’s workforce (I can also attest to the reality that they all hate the label “Millennials”). 

Of course, they’re not the “kids” such labeling tends to call to mind—the eldest are in the 40’s, after all.  But that’s the age when life’s biggest financial struggles come home to roost; college debt, home ownership, marriage, kids (and the prospects of THEIR college expenses), and—increasingly—the burdens of caring for their Boomer parents. In that sense, their experiences are comparable to the challenges their parents faced, though perhaps a tad later in life.

There are, of course, the economic and technological realities of their generation. At similar ages, odds are their parents were barely aware of the Internet, and “innovations” like smartphones, email and social media were not even glimmers of possibility beyond science fiction. Those influences are both empowering and debilitating, inflating expectations and fueling a certain peer pressure on a scale their parents couldn’t appreciate. 

That said, and despite the recent spate of negative press (giving Boomers a break[i]), I’m pretty sure that:

Millennials are saving for retirement—likely earlier, and at higher rates than you did when you were their age.

Sure, some of that is plan design—automatic enrollment was a rarity when their parents were coming into the workplace, and employers are increasingly coupling that design with contribution acceleration.  Moreover, immediate eligibility is increasingly popular (Vanguard’s 2023 How America Saves says 80% of plans now offer that, while the Plan Sponsor Council of America’s 65th Annual Survey of 401(k) and Profit-Sharing Plans puts it at just over half). And yes, that can matter a lot if job turnover is high—but it’s an urban myth[ii] that Millennials turnover more often than Boomers did at their age.

IF they have access to a plan at work, anyway.

Millennials are likely better invested for their retirement than you are—“then” and now.

Okay, as with saving for retirement, surely some of this is plan design—notably the default investment in target-date funds (TDFs) or some other qualified default investment alternative (QDIA)—and their more recent hire date. While data shows that TDF use varies with participant age and tenure, reports pretty consistently indicate that younger participants are more likely to hold TDFs than older participants (not so much due to their age, but due to their greater likelihood of being a new participant defaulted into the TDF. That doesn’t mean they are more involved/engaged/astute about those investments—but they’re likely more diversified, with portfolios regularly rebalanced (despite the conclusions of that survey above). 

BTW, that’s something that plan fiduciaries might want to keep in mind the next time the concept of reenrollment comes up.

Millennials are thinking about retirement. Probably more than you were at their age.

Millennials have never known a time without a 401(k), nor have they lived during a period when a personal responsibility for saving hasn’t been part and parcel of the education around their benefits package. They’ve been worried about Social Security’s sustainability from the time of their first paycheck (what they probably don’t appreciate is that their parents also worried, and arguably—in the early 1980s—with better reason).

While they certainly have options their parents didn’t, they also have their own set of challenges—some unique, but many unique only in that they are young(er). They have tools and innovative plan design, apps and the aptitude to use them, and in many cases access to professional guidance.

They may not know how much they need to save for retirement (nor do their parents, apparently), they may not yet feel that they can afford to save for retirement, they may not even know how to save for retirement—but you can bet they know they need to.

And, in more cases than one might expect from recent reports, with access to workplace retirement plans, the help of good plan design, and professional retirement planning advice, likely already doing so.         

- Nevin E. Adams, JD 

[i] And, once again, nobody seems to care about Gen X… who also hates that label!

[ii] The data show that median job tenure in the private sector in the United States has hovered around five years for the past several decades, according to the nonpartisan Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI). 

 

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