3 minute read
You’ll probably live longer than you think
By Liz Weston
Women often don’t score as well as men in surveys of financial literacy. One area where they seem to do better is “longevity literacy,” or understanding how long they’re likely to live.
Longevity literacy is essential to smart retirement planning. Overestimate your longevity, and you could retire too late or scrimp too much. Underestimate it, and you could run short of money.
In a recent TIAA Institute study, 43% of women correctly estimated the life expectancy of 60-year-old women in the U.S. (The right answer was 85.) Only 32% of men chose the correct answer for the life expectancy for 60-year-old men, which was 82.
Men also were far more likely than women to underestimate life expectancy — and that’s a huge potential problem for both sexes. A man who expects to die in his 70s might draw too much from retirement funds or start Social Security too early. That could leave him — and the spouse who may outlive him — with too little income later on.
“A lot of people do OK in their first 10 or 15 years of retirement,” said actuary Steve Vernon, a former research scholar at the Stanford Center on Longevity. “It’s often in their late 70s and 80s that they start to struggle.”
Our life expectancy ‘grows’
The life expectancy statistics that often make headlines aren’t the ones that matter for retirement planning, Vernon said.
For example, in December, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted that U.S. life expectancy dropped for the second year in a row.
But the number the CDC cited, 76.4 years, is life expectancy from birth. That figure includes infant mortality as well as the accidents, diseases, overdoses, homicides and suicides that end lives too early.
The thing about longevity is that it’s persistent. The longer you live, the longer you are likely to live.
One out of three men and 1 in 2 women in their mid-50s will live to 90, according to the Society of Actuaries. There’s a 50% chance that at least one member of a heterosexual married couple age 65 will be alive at 92.
With longer lives comes “longevity risk” — the chance that people will outlive their savings. Understanding and addressing that risk is an important element of retirement planning, but most Americans are falling short, said Surya Kolluri, head of the TIAA Institute, which conducts research on financial security.
More than half of Americans don’t understand how long people tend to live in retirement, according to a 2022 survey of more than 3,500 adults nationwide by the TIAA Institute and the Global Financial Literacy Excellence Center at the George
Washington University School of Business.
How to minimize your risk
The single most powerful way to miti-
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