The retirement savings crisis: Why more Americans can’t afford to stop working

Theresa Edwards thought these would be her golden years. Instead, she gets up at dawn to crisscross Los Angeles by bus to work as a caregiver. Waiting at home at the end of a long day is her last patient: Edwards' husband of 55 years, who is recovering from a serious car accident.

Edwards started caring for others at the age of 18 when her grandmother had Alzheimer’s disease. At 74, she tires more easily. Sometimes she has to stop and catch her breath. But taking a break isn’t an option.

Every dollar counts. Edwards doesn’t buy new clothes or get her nails done. She has no credit cards and deposits every cent she doesn’t spend on bills in a savings account.

Still, she barely clears enough each month to cover groceries, utilities and the $1,500 rent on her two-bedroom apartment where her four grandchildren and 9-year-old German shepherd, Duchess, also live.

“I bless Jesus and God for me to be as strong as I am at this age,” she said. “Sometimes I wish I could stop working. But the way life is going, I’m not sure I can.”

Retirement is increasingly becoming a luxury many American workers cannot afford. With rising housing costs and medical expenses and without the pensions that buoyed previous generations, millions of older Americans can’t stop working.

Social Security – which pays less than half of average wages and faces possible benefits cuts – doesn’t stretch far enough and many older Americans have too little stowed away in savings or 401(k) accounts to get by.

In fact, only about half of American households have retirement accounts, according to the federal Survey of Consumer Finances.

Many older Americans can’t stop working at retirement age

For decades, the combination of pensions − defined benefit plans − and Social Security made a dignified retirement possible for many.

Not today. Research from labor economist and professor at The New School for Social Research Teresa Ghilarducci shows just 10% of Americans between the ages of 62 and 70 who are retired are financially stable.

Most older Americans either are retired and live below the standard of living they had when they were working or they can’t afford to stop working, according to data Ghilarducci analyzed from the University of Michigan's Health and Retirement Survey.

“One in 2 people reaching retirement won’t have enough and 1 in 4 seniors are in poverty measured by international standards,” Ghilarducci said.

"The retirement savings crisis in the United States is no longer looming: it is here now," reads the first sentence in a recent report from the National Institute on Retirement Security.