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Nearly One-Quarter of Americans Have Increased Their Retirement Savings
Nearly one-quarter, 23%, of working Americans increased
their retirement savings contributions this year, the highest reading in six
years of polling, according to Bankrate.com. However, 16% are saving less, and
5% are not saving at all.
In 2011, only 15% increased
their retirement savings contributions, and 29% cut them.
“Working Americans are increasing their retirement savings more and more as the
economic recovery continues, whether saving the same percentage of higher
earnings or a higher percentage of the same earnings,” says Bankrate.com Chief
Financial Analyst Greg McBride.
Among households earning $50,000 or more a year, 27%
increased their retirement savings. Among households earning less than $50,000
a year, only 18% increased their retirement savings. Among households earning
less than $30,000 a year, 20% boosted contributions, but 22% scaled them back.
A larger percentage of every age group younger than 63 increased their savings
than decreased them, with Millennials, i.e. those between the ages of 18 and
26, leading the way. Nearly one-third, 30%, of Millennials increased their
retirement savings in the past year. Older workers, however, were more likely
to have cut back on their contributions than increased them. Sixteen percent of
older Boomers, i.e. those 63 to 71, cut back on their savings, while 15%
increased them. Forty-five percent of those in the Silent Generation, i.e.
those 72 and older, cut back on their retirement savings, while 13% increased
them.
Part-time workers were more likely to
decrease contributions than full-time workers (33% versus 17%).
Princeton Survey Research Associates International conducted the landline and cellphone survey for Bankrate.com among 1,002 adults in early August.
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