Fifth of Americans forced into retirement: study
Wed Dec 13, 5:22 PM ET
More than a fifth of all Americans are forced into early retirement, usually by layoffs and cutbacks at their companies, according to a study by Sun Life Financial Inc.
"Unanticipated, forced retirement is occurring at an alarming rate, leaving the retirees unprepared," said Mary Fay, head of the Sun Life annuities department. Sun Life conducted the study in conjunction with Harris Interactive, a worldwide polling organization.
Losing their jobs, on average about eight years early, leaves them ineligible for Social Security, unprepared for the future, and with half the savings they had expected for retirement, the study showed.
Sun Life, one of Canada's largest insurers, and Harris said a survey of 701 adults in the United States showed that 22 percent of all retirees had been involuntarily retired several years before they had anticipated, and 69 percent had to change their lifestyle as a result. About 55 percent were ineligible for Social Security when forced out of work.
Layoffs and downsizing accounted for nearly half of all forced retirements, with illness and injury the second biggest cause. Ten percent of women said family obligations were the reason, while 2 percent of men did.