Inflation fears are pushing more workers to delay retirement

Research shows older workers are increasingly putting off retirement due to concerns about inflation.
Pexels/Andrea Piacquadio

Inflation and the rising cost of living has 40% of private sector workers age 45 and older pushing back their plans for retirement.

That's according to a survey from Nationwide Retirement Institute, which also found 15% of older workers saying they don't think they'll ever be able to retire. Employees planning to retire later also cited shrunken retirement savings (47%) and concerns that a market crash would destroy their savings (44%) as reasons for wanting to work, on average, four years longer than they'd planned just one year ago.

Overall, the rough economic environment had 24% of workers age 45 or older saying they felt they were on "the wrong track for retirement." Only 58% reported having a positive outlook about their retirement plan and financial investments, down from 72% in a 2021 Nationwide survey.

The online survey, conducted from July 14 to August 5, reached 1,000 retirement plan participants age 45 or older and 100 employees between the ages of 35 and 44, as well as 500 company plan sponsors or benefits decision makers and 100 government plan sponsors or benefits decision makers. The results were tallied before the recent market plunge, which has hammered stocks and put a deeper dent in many retirement accounts.

Nationwide, an insurance company that sells annuities, found that about half of employees are interested in the products as part of a target-date fund or a managed account in their workplace plan.

That said, only 21% of employees said they were familiar with guaranteed lifetime income investment products.

Bloomberg News
Retirement Retirement planning Inflation
MORE FROM FINANCIAL PLANNING