New John Hancock Retirement Report Shares Insights Across Generations on Overall Preparedness and Financial Resilience as Longevity Increases

  • Report suggests actions for each generation and how retirement plan providers, plan sponsors and advisors can help them work towards better outcomes

  • With longer lives and potentially more years in retirement, action during working years is crucial

BOSTON, Oct. 22, 2024 /PRNewswire/ - Today, John Hancock Retirement, a company of Manulife Investment Management, released the John Hancock Financial Resilience and Longevity Report, incorporating data from its tenth annual survey of its U.S. retirement plan participants and a separate panel of U.S. retirees. The report shows how workers continue to face financial challenges, with Baby Boomers generally in a better financial position compared to Gen Xers and Gen Z/Millennials. Retiree experiences differ quite significantly depending on how/when respondents retired – as planned or earlier than expected.

John Hancock logo (CNW Group/John Hancock Retirement)
John Hancock logo (CNW Group/John Hancock Retirement)

Against a backdrop of longer life expectancy, and potentially more years to fund in retirement, the report explores what can be done to help improve financial resilience when working, possibly enabling people to save more for retirement.

In addition to this latest report, earlier this year, as part of its focus on increasing longevity, John Hancock and Manulife announced a five-year, multimillion dollar collaboration with MIT AgeLab with the goals of raising public awareness and driving innovation in how people prepare for longer lives. Insights from this work will be used by the business to help financial professionals and plan sponsors do all they can to help individuals prepare for a comfortable retirement.

"All over the world, people are living longer. While we used to count retirement in years, now, many of us can look forward to counting it in decades," said Aimee DeCamillo, Global Head of Retirement, Manulife Investment Management. "With life expectancy close to 80, Americans must now plan for how they'll live and fund multiple decades of retirement. This year's report brings additional clarity to help participants save, stay invested, and transition into retirement."

The report suggests that the age at which a worker plans to retire (their target retirement age) depends partly on the financial resilience they're able to achieve during their working years. It refers to financial resilience as the ability to navigate financial obstacles such as debt, college costs, healthcare expenses, and emergencies. Workers struggling to meet their current financial needs often struggle to build this resilience and tend to delay saving for retirement.