
美国职场人士往往希望在60多岁时卸下工作重担,过上安逸的退休生活。但对大多数人来说,这一愿景正变得越来越难以实现。事实上,许多临近退休的从业者,可能是在财务保障十分薄弱的情况下迈入退休阶段。
阿波罗全球管理公司(Apollo Global Management)首席经济学家托尔斯滕·斯洛克基于美国退休人员协会(AARP)数据所做的最新分析显示,美国私营部门中,接近一半的工作年龄人口没有退休账户。不出所料,仍处于职业发展早期的人群情况最为严峻:18至34岁的Z世代和千禧一代年轻人中,约有57%尚未设立任何退休计划。不过,这一问题同样涉及那些拥有数十年工作经验的年长群体。
在私营企业就业的美国人中,34至44岁人群中约有43%没有退休计划,45至54岁为41%,55至65岁为40%。这意味着,近四成美国X世代人群,甚至部分婴儿潮一代,并未为退休进行储蓄安排。
随着这些年长员工逐步迈向职业生涯的终点,这种状况可能会对他们离职退休后的生活预期带来严重冲击。
美国人尚未做好退休准备,一些退休者正“深陷生活窘境”
大多数美国人表示自己处于“月光”状态;随着住房、育儿和食品杂货等支出耗尽了大部分收入,为退休储蓄变得异常困难。财务压力之大,甚至让一些人开始动用原本为退休准备的资金。
根据Payroll Integrations公司2025年的一份报告,各年龄段中约38%的职场人士曾从退休账户中取款。其中,仍在为体面收入打拼的Z世代最有可能动用这笔钱,近一半年轻人已经提前动用了自己的退休储蓄。
不过,31%的千禧一代、41%的X世代和婴儿潮一代也动用了退休储蓄。大多数提前支取的原因,是应对突发紧急情况或偿还迫在眉睫的债务。
为了维持生计,许多美国人正在打破传统的退休时间安排,选择延长工作年限。
皮尤研究中心(Pew Research Center)2023年的分析显示,自上世纪80年代以来,美国65岁以后仍在工作的群体规模翻了两番。同时,人们也普遍担心晚年储蓄会耗尽。投资银行D.A. Davidson 2025年的一项调查显示,超过五分之二的美国退休人群(约2,000万人)担心,自己的储蓄无法支撑理想的退休生活。
而对于一些已经结束职业生涯的人来说,这种担忧已经成为现实。施罗德(Schroders)2025年的一项研究显示,近20%的美国退休者正“艰难度日”或“深陷生活窘境”;与此同时,仅有5%的人表示自己“过上了理想生活”。
美国人认为安稳退休需要210万美元,但真正实现的人寥寥无几
彻底告别职场、悠闲养老是有代价的,而这笔开销,动辄高达数百万美元。
当全球最大资产管理公司贝莱德(BlackRock)今年早些时候对美国选民进行调查,询问他们认为实现舒适退休需要多少资金时,他们回复的平均金额约为210万美元。
贝莱德首席执行官拉里·芬克表示,“几乎没有人”有望达成这一目标。贝莱德的研究发现,62%的受访者退休储蓄不足15万美元,仅相当于他们认为所需210万美元的7%左右。芬克还指出,美国在应对预期寿命延长方面准备不足,以及老年护理成本不断上升等因素,正在加剧退休储蓄问题。他预计这一问题在未来几代人中只会更加严重。
芬克在其2025年致股东信中写道:“随着最年长的X世代开始退休,这个问题只会变得更加严峻、更加棘手。他们是第一代主要依赖401(k)退休计划的人群,而依赖401(k)退休计划的趋势正在千禧一代和Z世代中持续扩大。”(财富中文网)
译者:郝秀
审校:汪皓
美国职场人士往往希望在60多岁时卸下工作重担,过上安逸的退休生活。但对大多数人来说,这一愿景正变得越来越难以实现。事实上,许多临近退休的从业者,可能是在财务保障十分薄弱的情况下迈入退休阶段。
阿波罗全球管理公司(Apollo Global Management)首席经济学家托尔斯滕·斯洛克基于美国退休人员协会(AARP)数据所做的最新分析显示,美国私营部门中,接近一半的工作年龄人口没有退休账户。不出所料,仍处于职业发展早期的人群情况最为严峻:18至34岁的Z世代和千禧一代年轻人中,约有57%尚未设立任何退休计划。不过,这一问题同样涉及那些拥有数十年工作经验的年长群体。
在私营企业就业的美国人中,34至44岁人群中约有43%没有退休计划,45至54岁为41%,55至65岁为40%。这意味着,近四成美国X世代人群,甚至部分婴儿潮一代,并未为退休进行储蓄安排。
随着这些年长员工逐步迈向职业生涯的终点,这种状况可能会对他们离职退休后的生活预期带来严重冲击。
美国人尚未做好退休准备,一些退休者正“深陷生活窘境”
大多数美国人表示自己处于“月光”状态;随着住房、育儿和食品杂货等支出耗尽了大部分收入,为退休储蓄变得异常困难。财务压力之大,甚至让一些人开始动用原本为退休准备的资金。
根据Payroll Integrations公司2025年的一份报告,各年龄段中约38%的职场人士曾从退休账户中取款。其中,仍在为体面收入打拼的Z世代最有可能动用这笔钱,近一半年轻人已经提前动用了自己的退休储蓄。
不过,31%的千禧一代、41%的X世代和婴儿潮一代也动用了退休储蓄。大多数提前支取的原因,是应对突发紧急情况或偿还迫在眉睫的债务。
为了维持生计,许多美国人正在打破传统的退休时间安排,选择延长工作年限。
皮尤研究中心(Pew Research Center)2023年的分析显示,自上世纪80年代以来,美国65岁以后仍在工作的群体规模翻了两番。同时,人们也普遍担心晚年储蓄会耗尽。投资银行D.A. Davidson 2025年的一项调查显示,超过五分之二的美国退休人群(约2,000万人)担心,自己的储蓄无法支撑理想的退休生活。
而对于一些已经结束职业生涯的人来说,这种担忧已经成为现实。施罗德(Schroders)2025年的一项研究显示,近20%的美国退休者正“艰难度日”或“深陷生活窘境”;与此同时,仅有5%的人表示自己“过上了理想生活”。
美国人认为安稳退休需要210万美元,但真正实现的人寥寥无几
彻底告别职场、悠闲养老是有代价的,而这笔开销,动辄高达数百万美元。
当全球最大资产管理公司贝莱德(BlackRock)今年早些时候对美国选民进行调查,询问他们认为实现舒适退休需要多少资金时,他们回复的平均金额约为210万美元。
贝莱德首席执行官拉里·芬克表示,“几乎没有人”有望达成这一目标。贝莱德的研究发现,62%的受访者退休储蓄不足15万美元,仅相当于他们认为所需210万美元的7%左右。芬克还指出,美国在应对预期寿命延长方面准备不足,以及老年护理成本不断上升等因素,正在加剧退休储蓄问题。他预计这一问题在未来几代人中只会更加严重。
芬克在其2025年致股东信中写道:“随着最年长的X世代开始退休,这个问题只会变得更加严峻、更加棘手。他们是第一代主要依赖401(k)退休计划的人群,而依赖401(k)退休计划的趋势正在千禧一代和Z世代中持续扩大。”(财富中文网)
译者:郝秀
审校:汪皓
American workers have dreams of throwing in the towel by their mid-60s and spending the rest of their days in cushy retirement—but it’s become less of a reality for most. In fact, many professionals aging towards their workforce exit could make the leap with thin financial safety nets.
Nearly half of working-age Americans in the private sector don’t have a retirement account, according to a recent AARP data analysis from Apollo Global Management’s chief economist Torsten Slok. As expected, those that are still building their careers are the worst off; about 57% of Gen Zers and young millennials aged 18 to 34 do not have a plan set up. However, the issue even extends to older generations who have decades of experience under their belts.
About 43% of Americans aged 34 to 44 employed by private companies do not have a retirement plan in place, as well as 41% of those 45 to 54 years old, and 40% of U.S. workers who are 55 to 65. That means that around four in 10 U.S. Gen Xers, and even some baby boomers, aren’t squaring away money in retirement plans.
And as many of these older workers barrel towards the end of their careers, it could spell trouble for their living expectations after leaving payroll.
Americans aren’t prepared to stop working, and some retirees are ‘living the nightmare’
The majority of Americans say they’re living paycheck-to-paycheck; as housing costs, child care, and groceries gobble up a majority of workers’ income, setting funds aside for retirement can feel like a tall order. Finances have become so dire that some are even dipping into what they’ve already set aside for post-work life.
About 38% of professionals across all generations have withdrawn money from their retirement accounts, according to a 2025 report from Payroll Integrations. And Gen Zers still grinding for a decent wage were the most likely to take money out of their plans, with nearly half of the young adults having already dipped into their retirement funds.
However, 31% of millennials and 41% of Gen Xers and baby boomers also siphoned money from their retirement savings. Most of the early withdrawals stemmed from unexpected emergencies and paying off looming debt.
And to make ends meet, many Americans are bucking traditional timelines and holding onto their jobs for longer.
The number of those who are working past 65 has quadrupled in the U.S. since the 1980s, according to 2023 analysis from Pew Research Center. And there’s real concern over their funds running dry late in life; over two in five retired Americans, amounting to about 20 million people, worry that their funds won’t be able to support their ideal retirement lifestyle, according to a 2025 survey from investment banking firm D.A. Davidson.
For some who have already called it quits on their careers, that fear has already become a reality. Nearly 20% of American retirees are “struggling” or “living the nightmare,” according to a 2025 study from Schroders. Meanwhile, only 5% said they were “living the dream.”
Americans say it takes $2.1 million to retire comfortably—but few are on track
Clocking out for good and kicking your feet up comes with a cost—and the price tag has been set in the millions.
When BlackRock, the world’s largest asset management firm, surveyed U.S. voters earlier this year on how much they think they’d need to retire comfortably, the average response landed around $2.1 million.
The company’s CEO, Larry Fink, said that “almost no one” is close to reaching that goal. BlackRock’s study found that 62% of respondents had less than $150,000 saved for retirement—about 7% of the $2.1 million they think they’d need to stop working. Fink also pointed to several factors exacerbating America’s retirement savings problem, including the U.S.’s lack of preparedness for rising life expectancy, and climbing senior care costs. And he predicted it’ll only get worse for future generations.
“The problem will only get harder and nastier as the oldest Gen-Xers start to retire,” Fink wrote in his 2025 annual shareholders letter. “They’re the first generation primarily dependent on 401(k)s. And the 401(k) trend is growing with Millennials and Gen Z.”