People Are Saving Less
- The Commerce Department reports that Americans are saving at the lowest rate since the Great Depression.
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Personal savings stood at a national level of negative $6.2 million in January.
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About 40% of Americans say they are saving nothing for retirement. One reason: Over the past year, inflation rose 4.3% while salaries rose only 3.4%.
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One in four Americans told the Employee Benefit Research Institute that they have no savings at all.
Retirement Is Coming Later and Later
- The percentage of Americans 55 or older working full-time increased from 54.2% in 1993 to 64.4% in 2005.
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Nearly one in four people between 65 and 74 was still in the labor force in 2006, compared with just one in five in 2000.
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A recent study indicates that 17% of workers have suffered a reduction of retirement benefits offered by their employers in the last two years. Of these, only one-third say they are saving more for their retirement as a result.
Student Debt Is Piling Up
- Tuition costs have climbed 60% since 2000, and the average graduating senior now owes more than $20,000, according to the National Center for Education Statistics -- twice as much as graduates owed a decade ago.
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Nearly a quarter of recent grads owe in excess of $25,000.
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While student debt rose 8% from 2005 to 2006, starting salaries rose only 4%.
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