New Research Points to Lifetime Income as the Missing Link to Global Retirement Security
Today, during the Spring IMF World Bank Meetings, Prudential Financial, Inc. (NYSE: PRU) unveiled new global research conducted by the Global Aging Institute (GAI) showing that while retirement savings have grown in many countries, most systems still leave individuals on their own to manage the risk of outspending or outliving their savings. The study concludes that lifetime income can significantly strengthen retirement security, helping people spend more confidently while reducing the overall cost and strain on retirement systems.
The Case for Lifetime Income research highlights the essential role of lifetime income in enhancing retirement security for individuals and society. The industry collectively needs to make it easier for retirees to turn appropriate portions of their savings into an income stream that lasts their lifetime.
“Retirement security is one of the most defining issues of our time and solving for it will require collaboration across employers, financial institutions, and policymakers,” said Phil Waldeck, head of U.S. Businesses at Prudential Financial. “For Prudential, our role in addressing this new era of longevity is helping individuals, financial advisors and workplace plan sponsors move beyond just account balances and savings to meet today’s critical income planning and decumulation needs of aging populations.”
GAI studied economic trends in Australia, Japan, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States, showing the evolving retirement systems. While retirement savings are trending upward among defined contribution-style systems, following the shift from defined benefit to defined contribution plans, many systems still rely on purely voluntary withdrawal or income strategies that, by their nature, contain fundamental risks of inaction.
“Our analysis shows that when countries fail to make adequate provision for lifetime income, it greatly reduces the efficiency and increases the cost of their retirement systems while needlessly leaving individuals at risk of outliving their savings,” said Richard Jackson, co-author of the study and the president and founder of the Global Aging Institute.
The report provides a set of policy guidelines that would protect lifetime income by normalizing or defaulting to longevity pooling, while preserving flexibility and helping manage market volatility, inflation, or interest-rate concerns. While there are not “one-size-fits-all” lifetime income and retirement security solutions, the study offers broad policymaker guidelines, which, among others include
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