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15 Best Places to Retire in Ohio

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This article takes a look at the 15 best places to retire in Ohio. If you wish to skip our detailed analysis on navigating retirement living in the US, you may go to 5 Best Places to Retire in Ohio.

Adieu, Baby Boomers

The last of America’s Baby Boomers will soon be entering retirement. The segment known as ‘Peak Baby Boomers’ - which consists of those in the Baby Boomer category who will reach the age of 65 between 2024 and 2030 - is the last of the generation. While these somewhat 30.4 million individuals are all set to leave the workforce behind and start their days of leisure, there is one looming factor that poses trouble - finances. A recent study by the Alliance for Lifetime Income found that Peak Baby Boomers were not on the path to a financially secure retirement, with the worst of the lot going to Hispanic Americans, Black Americans, and those without a college education.

“Those without a college degree are by and large not prepared for retirement. They have not saved enough.”

Of Peak Baby Boomers, a sizeable 36% hold a high school graduation as their highest level of education and have median retirement savings of $75,000. Worse yet is the fate of soon-to-be senior citizens without a completed high school education. Numbering 9% of all Peak Baby Boomers, this group has accumulated a mere median retirement savings of just $7,000 - making the road ahead seem tough. Race disparities within retirement savings were also massive. For instance, white Americans held median retirement savings of $299,000 - a huge sum next to the $49,000 that black Americans have accumulated in median retirement savings.

As such, what should otherwise be a time of great excitement and happiness is often marred by more pessimistic shades. A survey conducted by CNBC titled ‘International Your Money Financial Security Survey’ found that 53% of Americans believed that they were lagging when it came to retirement savings and planning. This attitude, while concerning, is not unbecoming, notes Teresa Ghilarducci, an economist at The New School for Social Research in New York.

“There's nothing irrational about being nervous that you won't have enough money to live on to last your whole life, because most people do not have enough money to last their whole life and maintain their standard of living in retirement.”

The problem of not having enough money saved for retirement is more a thing of the present rather than a pattern carrying on from the past, and it is a problem partially born out of defined contribution retirement plans. The defined contribution plan - such as an IRA and 401(k) - places the weight of retirement savings on the individual, as opposed to defined benefit plans such as pensions. With defined contribution plans being the norm post-1980, people have found it more difficult to build up sizeable retirement savings - a fact that has been made more fraught due to rising costs of living.