A troubling new study, Race and Retirement Insecurity in the U.S., reveals that America’s retirement crisis is particularly dire for blacks and Latinos.
“If nothing changes, the future for people of color is frightening,” author Nari Rhee, research manager for the nonprofit National Institute on Retirement Security , told me. Read the report here .
Rhee’s report comes on the heels of other recent surveys from financial services firms and consultants with their own scary stats documenting the general lack of retirement savings among blacks and Latinos.
Striking racial differences for retirement saving
Among the key findings in the Race and Retirement Insecurity report:
One slight caveat about the study: It’s based on 2010 data, so the numbers don’t reflect the recent run-up in stock prices and housing values.
“Obviously, there’s been an improvement in retirement account values since then,” said Rhee, “and, with the economy growing, more people are saving.” But she said she doubted that updated numbers would be much higher for minority households in general, because so many of them are still not offered retirement plans at work.
That brings me to the key question: What’s behind the huge retirement savings gap between blacks, Latinos and whites?
It’s complicated. But here are five reasons based on the NIRS study and other surveys I’ve seen:
[white supremacy]