Study finds suboptimal timing costs $111,000
per household
Jun
28, 2019 @ 12:06 am By Mary Beth Franklin
Despite all the talk about the value of
maximizing Social Security benefits, it seems few retirees are listening. The
fact that only 4% of retirees wait until age 70 to claim their maximum
retirement benefits is not news. What is noteworthy, however, is how much those
early claiming decisions are costing retirees in terms of potential retirement
income and overall wealth.
Social Security pays over $1 trillion in
benefits to more than 65 million people each year, or about nine out of every
10 retirees. It accounts for about one-third of all retirement income each
year. About 50% of current retirees report that more than half of their annual
income from Social Security while a third report than more than 90% of their
income comes from these benefits.
A new study, "The Retirement Solution
Hiding in Plain Sight: How Much Retirees Would Gain by Improving Social
Security Decisions," quantifies the lifelong impact of
workers claiming benefits before their full retirement age. The study was
co-authored by Matt Fellowes, head of retirement-focused robo-adviser United
Income, and two former top researchers at the Social Security Administration.
U.S. retirees would be able to generate an
additional $3.4 trillion in income during their retirement — an average of
about $111,000 per household — if they optimized their decision about when to
claim Social Security, the study calculated. Nearly all of this income is lost
because one or more retirees in a household claimed Social Security too early,
which means their Social Security benefit is lower than it would be if they had
waited.
Spread out across the population of
individuals who are claiming Social Security suboptimally, those extra dollars
add up to a substantial amount of money and could significantly improve
retirement outcomes for a majority of Americans.
"About 92% of retirees that claimed
Social Security suboptimally would have seen their annual income increase if
they had made the claiming decision that maximized the probability they would
have enough money to afford retirement," the study found. More than half
of those retirees would see their annual income in retirement increase by more
than 25% in their 70s and 80s.
Bottom line: About 21% of those at risk of not
being able to afford retirement would see an improvement in their chances if
they claimed Social Security at the optimal time, the study found.
For some people, the best way to delay
claiming Social Security is to work longer. Wealthier
retirees can afford to draw down their savings while waiting until age 70 to
claim maximum Social Security benefits.
Deciding when to claim Social Security
benefits also has an enormous impact on end-of-life wealth.
While it is true that most retirees will lose
wealth in their 60s and their early 70s if they choose to delay collecting
Social Security, they will be wealthier in their late 70s through the rest of
their lives because of the effect of drawing down more investments in their
earlier years of retirement and less in later years as higher Social Security
benefits kick in.
Current retirees will collectively lose an
estimated $2.1 trillion in wealth because they made the suboptimal decision
about when to claim Social Security, or an average of about $68,000 per
household.
Part of the problem is that it is too easy to
claim Social Security benefits early at age 62. And recipients often aren't
aware that their benefits will be reduced by 25% or more for the rest of their
lives.
The authors made a bold suggestion that public policy should
be changed to nudge people toward more appropriate claiming decisions.
"We believe early claiming should be made
an exception and reserved for those who have a demonstrable need to claim
benefits before the full retirement age," the study concluded.
Jason Fichtner, one of the study authors and
former chief economist at the Social Security Administration, admitted that
there is virtually no political appetite for that type of policy change.
However, he said the same goal could be
accomplished by changing how the Social Security Administration describes
claiming ages to the public. Instead of portraying age 62 as the "early
eligibility age," it could simple be labeled the "minimum benefit
age," and age 70 could
be labeled the "maximum benefit age."
The study authors also suggested that there is
a clear disincentive for traditional wealth management firms, which manage over
$20 trillion in retail assets, to help clients make optimal Social Security
claiming decisions since such decisions are likely to result in investment
account balances declining in the short run.
"Providing cover for executives at these
firm to make the right financial decisions for their clients, and the right
long-term decision for their shareholders, may be helpful at accelerating the
adoption of highly efficacious Social Security advice," the authors
concluded.
Check out Mary Beth Franklin's podcast, Retirement Repair Shop.
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