Older Wives Manage the Finances if Husbands Decline

The consensus in the research is that women’s financial literacy is lower than men’s. Maybe women aren’t as interested in the markets, and many are too busy juggling a job with taking care of the children to find time for financial matters anyway. Women’s general aversion to finance may also be akin to their lack of confidence in their math skills. But something interesting happens in old age. Wives will rise to the challenge and take over the finances from their husbands if they have to. A new study of older couples finds that wives’ financial competence increases as they try to compensate and prevent costly mistakes when they see that a husband’s executive function is slipping. “Specifically,” the researchers…

December 14, 2023

Blue-collar Workers Say Physical Demands are Rising

For obvious reasons, people who do physically demanding work are prone to injuring themselves on the job and are more likely than office workers to apply for federal disability benefits. But is technology changing this relationship? We know technology has caused a decline in manual labor, and the blue-collar jobs that remain are also easier to perform when machinery and computers are doing more of the heavy lifting workers used to do – think warehouse robots that alleviate the need to lift and carry heavy boxes. But new research based on a survey of couples between ages 51 and 61 – a population that is particularly vulnerable to illness and musculoskeletal disabilities – finds no evidence they feel the physica…

December 12, 2023

COVID’s Undue Financial Toll on Older Blacks, Hispanics

Anyone who was paying attention to COVID’s devastation, whether in terms of being exposed to the virus at work or deaths, could not miss the racial aspect of it. A new study of Americans over 50 confirms that Black and Hispanic workers, whose jobs often placed them on the front lines in the service industry, were much more likely to miss at least two weeks of work due to illness than their White counterparts. And this vulnerability had serious financial consequences, which were often compounded by a lack of employer benefits like paid time off or sick days if they contracted the virus. The federal relief package initially passed by Congress required employers to provide paid sick time but that…

December 7, 2023

Family Care Demands Don’t Stop at Nursing Home Door

Anyone who thinks that moving an elderly parent out of her home and into a facility will eliminate the need for most of the care they’ve been providing should think again. Two University of Pennsylvania researchers added up the hours that adult children, spouses and other unpaid caregivers provide when loved ones are in assisted living, nursing homes and other facilities. For example, informal caregivers put in only about a fourth of the hours at nursing homes that they would if their loved one were still living at home – that’s no doubt one reason for moving in the first place. But they still do an awful lot. Informal caregivers spend an average of 37 hours per month helping someon…

December 5, 2023

High vs Low Incomes: How Retirement Outlooks Diverge

Roughly three out of four low-income households might not have enough money to maintain even their modest standard of living after they retire. This sobering finding comes in a refinement by the Center for Retirement Research of its periodic look at workers’ retirement prospects. The center’s researchers use the data in the Federal Reserve’s periodic Survey of Consumer Finances to estimate how workers are doing. And time after time, they arrive at a similar conclusion: in the 2019 survey, roughly half of all working households were at risk of falling at least 10 percent short of the income they’ll need to maintain their current living standard in retirement. But a second analysis of the 2019 data split the households into…

November 30, 2023

Medicaid Expansion: a New Option for Disabled Workers

Picture an older warehouse worker whose back pain might qualify him for a federal cash benefit for his disability. If he’s right and his application is approved, he would get the Medicare health insurance he needs to manage his condition. But there’s a problem. Applicants often quit their jobs to strengthen the case for disability. But quitting would mean giving up his employer’s health insurance and going without coverage during the two-year waiting period for the Medicare that follows approval for disability benefits. Economists have a name for this predicament: job lock. A new study finds that the expansion of the Medicaid health insurance program, which has now spread to 40 states, opens up a new path for disabled workers…

November 28, 2023

Happy Thanksgiving to Our Readers

My husband’s family has a nice tradition. They go around the table, and each person says what they’re thankful for. What they say changes with the passing years, depending on their joys and crises and sometimes on world events.   The staff at Squared Away and the blog’s sponsor, the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, wish you a wonderful day of Thanksgiving with family and friends. Squared Away writer Kim Blanton invites you to follow us on Twitter @SquaredAwayBC. To stay current on our blog, please join our free email list. You’ll receive just one email each week – with links to the two new posts for that week – when you sign up here.  This blog is supported by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston Colleg…

November 22, 2023

Procrastinating on Retirement Saving Leads to Trouble

This is a fun TED talk on a topic all of us can relate to: procrastination. It is relevant to a central theme of this blog: retirement. Research shows that procrastination plays at least a small role in why so many U.S. workers haven’t saved enough to retire in the lifestyle they’re accustomed to. The urgency of saving early has never been truer than it is for Millennials and Gen-Z. More on that later. First, let Tim Urban explain his theory about procrastination. He is a master procrastinator, demonstrated by his handling of his senior college thesis, a year-long project jammed into three days that included two all-nighters. He argues that when a deadline is fast approaching, procrastinators panic and…

November 21, 2023

New Mothers Who Get Back to Work Quickly Earn More

Single mothers receive three-fourths of the tax refunds the IRS pays out every year through the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) for low-income workers. The EITC’s big plus is that it’s fully refundable. In contrast to nonrefundable tax credits that reduce the taxes a worker already owes, the EITC gives refunds even if they don’t owe anything, as is often the case with low-income workers. Another plus is the amount in an EITC refund, which is sizable relative to how much they earn. These advantages are important because they create a financial incentive for new mothers to get back to work quickly so they can claim the credit at tax time. Congress in 1993 enhanced that incentive by hiking t…

November 16, 2023

Race is a Factor in Where We Get Social Security Info

The first place most people say they would go for information about Social Security’s various benefits is family and friends. That’s true whether they are Black, White, Asian, or Hispanic. But after family and friends, there are few similarities in whom each group consults. And their preferences, revealed in a new survey, reflect differences in their socioeconomic circumstances and social networks. White workers, who are wealthier overall than Blacks and Hispanics, stand out for being more likely to say they would ask financial advisers and accountants about Social Security. Black and Hispanic workers more often would rely on social services agencies, and Blacks also ask for help at church. It’s crucial that people get accurate information about the Social Security…

November 14, 2023

More Bad News on Our Health Insurance Costs

Nearly 40 percent of Americans have delayed or skipped necessary medical care in the past year because they couldn’t afford it. How do we stack up to other developed countries? Dead last. Even the lowest-wage workers in places like Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom are better able to afford their care than the average U.S. worker. The cost barriers to U.S. healthcare, laid out in a new report by The Commonwealth Fund, are hardly earth-shattering news. Large deductibles, a sharp rise in 2023 premiums, the high cost of prescriptions, spotty insurance options, and providers’ poor billing practices – the multitude of problems continue. Many Americans, regardless of how much they earn or the quality of their insurance, “hav…

November 9, 2023

Injured Workers’ Lost Income Adds Up to Thousands

On-the-job injuries, like layoffs, are life-altering events. A worker can lose tens of thousands of dollars in earnings over many years as a result, according to a new RAND study. The researchers used data from California’s workers’ compensation system to investigate what happened to injured workers’ earnings over a 14-year period. They were interested in the people whose injuries were serious enough to prevent them from working for a significant amount of time. These injured workers, who had either a temporary or permanent disability and received workers’ compensation, were compared with workers with minor injuries who didn’t miss any work or were out for fewer than four days. After their injuries, the workers with significant lost time earned $920 less…

November 7, 2023