Despite enormous changes in our society, belief in the “right” to retire at 65 has continued as a constant “given.” Actually, 65 was a man-made pragmatic solution for a particular political problem—in Germany—over 150 years ago. Since then, major changes in healthcare have substantially changed how long (and how well) we live. Allocating all these extra years to retirement has profoundly changed the work/retirement balance with dark consequences for millions of individuals and for our society.
Numbers can be deceptive. They are quantitative, yet in the blink of a chameleon's eye they can convert into qualitative symbols when linked to the dynamic world of emotions, expectations, and beliefs.
Consider the deeper meanings that surge to mind as you ponder such numbers as 65, 9/11, 18, 16, 13, 1st or 99-and-44/100%. Do we all think of retirement, the World Trade Center, voting, driving, bad luck, that first kiss, or Ivory Soap that floats?
Context matters because an objective number can, as a symbol, have many subjective meanings. As we all know, the same numbers can have very different symbolic or emotional meanings: 5 minutes early vs. 5 minutes late for lunch with a friend versus 5 minutes late for a plane versus 5 minutes late for a wedding versus 5 minutes late for your wedding.
We expect numbers to remain constant—phone numbers, a lock combination, birthdays, and anniversaries or even our weight on the bathroom scale. The number 65 is one number that we must recognize as having changed significantly in its meaning; and if we don't, we could all be making huge mistakes.
Everyone knows 65 is “the age of retirement.” Retiring at 65 has been around so long that most of us accept it as a fact and a right without question. But the meaning of 65 has been changing a lot over a long time.
In 1935, Social Security became law and 65 became the Full Retirement Age. But what did 65 really mean and where did it come from? The concept of a government-mandated retirement program for workers had already “originated” twice in the United States, once with disabled Civil War veterans in the late 1860s and once in the 1920s with the massive Federal move into regulating the nation's railroads. With a commitment to modernize as well as regulate our railroads, various groups studied everything about the railroads of other advanced nations, particularly in Europe and especially in Germany, which had the world's most advanced railroads at the time.
It was noted that Germany retired its railroad workers at 65 and that this was one reason their rail system had such an exemplary safety record. So retirement at 65 was put into the U.S. railroad legislation. But how had 65 been selected by the German railroads?
Originally, Chancellor Otto von Bismarck had established the retirement age of 70 in the 1880s. Having brought the numerous different Germanic states into one Pan-German empire Bismarck was looking for powerful symbols to demonstrate the advantages of a unified Germany. The telegraph was new and fast, so it was developed as part of the postal system to symbolize the technological benefit of a unified Germany. Similarly, the railroads were new too.
With a network of railroads, coal and iron could be moved great distances from the mines to the steel mills, while fresh food could be moved quickly from farms to cities. Passengers too could travel easily and at low cost whether for business or pleasure. The benefits were exciting evidence of Bismarck's political genius and a unified Germany's glorious prospects. Everything worked well—until the major train wrecks which were, of course, widely reported in major newspapers.
Talk about PR problems! The cause of these dreadful accidents had to be determined and stopped! As it turned out, the accidents were almost always due to the fellows at the switches literally “falling asleep at the switch.” Why? Because they were so old. On further examination, it was learned that the work crews—worried that the oldest men couldn't keep up with the others in the hard, manual labor of laying heavy ties and rails—had assigned the old men to the light work of manning the switches. But, sitting alone for hours in the warm sun, the old workers sometimes dozed off.
This presented a dilemma. To get workers to leave their traditional farming jobs to work on the new-fangled railroads, Bismarck had promised to pay workers for life. So they could not just be laid off: that would have provoked a storm of protests. The only answer was to pay workers not to work and a new term “pension” was used to describe those payments.
To minimize the cost, retirement was set at 70, an age to which very few lived. Later, to be sure to eliminate all old-age accidents, this age was reduced in 1916, to 65. (Meanwhile in the United Kingdom, Neville Chamberlain, as Chancellor of the Exchequer, had introduced pensions at 70, which also were quickly reduced to 65 when he saw what the Germans were doing.) A few years later, retirement at 65 was picked up by the U.S. Congress in the Railroad Retirement Act. So it was that 65 was already a well-established precedent when Social Security was being formulated in 1935.
At age 65, life expectancy for the male American worker in 1935 was less than 13 years. Today at 65, life expectancy is over 20 years (thanks to better diets and healthcare).
One of the results is that the average number of expected years in retirement is now much longer than in 1935. The ratio of working years to retirement years has changed dramatically—from over 3:1 to just 2:1. This 2:1 ratio is not sustainable! It's not sustainable because few workers will have the self-discipline to save the 12–14% of income during their working years that would be required to invest and sustain them through all those years in retirement.
But there is another way: Rebalance! We can rebalance by moving the fulcrum so our work and save years, are balanced with our retirement spend years. Once we understand the realities, most of us will each want to move the retirement age fulcrum from 65 to 70—or more.
So now let's look at how the meaning of 65 has changed. Obviously, the major change is in the number of retirement years that need to be financed by Social Security benefits and by savings, mostly in 401(k) plans (or IRA conversions from 401(k)s). The second big change is the increasing costs of the last few years of life, particularly when it comes to healthcare and assisted living. (One reason we live longer is major advances in healthcare technology—MRIs, pharmaceuticals, etc. are both wonderful and expensive.)
Working to 70 leads to another important number: If, instead of claiming Social Security benefits as early as possible—at age 62—we each decide to keep working until 70, we increase our Social Security benefits a lot. By working 8 more years—some 20% longer—we increase our annual Social Security benefits by a full 76%—payable for life and continuously adjusted to offset inflation.
And in addition, our 401(k) or IRA balances also go up a lot—in three ways: For each of those 8 years, we don't need to take money out to cover expenses (because we're still working); we continue contributing—ideally 14% each year; and our investments keep compounding tax-free. This troika should more than double our balances and our payouts.
Retirement is expensive. That's why an increasing number of workers are realizing that 65 is a very misleading number. Those who are well informed about their choices will want to continue working until 70, both to increase Social Security benefits and to increase 401(k) payout.
What folks don't know about the benefits of working longer and the even bigger gains in 401(k) payouts—because 65 does not mean today what 65 used to mean many long years ago can hurt us—can hurt us badly. The pain for individuals will also be pain for our society and our politics, particularly if a political demagog exploits the resulting dissatisfaction.
To borrow from Bishop Berkeley's philosophical question about the great tree falling in the forest when nobody was there to hear it; if workers don't know the facts about the 76% increase in Social Security benefits, does it matter? It sure does to me! Doesn't it matter to you?
Source: Wealthfront, Autumn, 2014.