Financial Insecurity is a Major Concern for Women Approaching Retirement

"All too often, older women are feeling the very real consequences of the income gap during retirement. After careers of earning less than their male counterparts, women are more likely to face financial insecurity, and this survey shows widespread concern among women, far more than men," said Anna Maria Chávez, NCOA Executive Vice President and Chief Growth Officer.
"Those results underscore the reality of an uneven playing field for women in the American economy and the economic opportunity cost after years as mothers and caregivers and not wage-earners. However, the ever-rising cost of health care and prescription drugs are a real and imminent threat to a safe, secure, and dignified retirement for aging adults across the country regardless of gender. Those on fixed incomes are even more worried," added Chávez.
The survey of 1227 adults aged 60 and over conducted between
60 percent of women aged 60 and over are worried health care costs will exceed retirement income
- 56 percent of Americans aged 60 and over, regardless of gender, are worried that health care costs will exceed retirement income
- 68 percent of Americans aged 60 and over with household incomes of under
$50,000 are worried
46 percent of women aged 60 and over are worried that prescription medicine costs will exceed retirement income
- 43 percent of Americans aged 60 and over, regardless of gender, are worried that prescription medicine costs will exceed retirement income
- 54 percent of Americans aged 60 and over with household incomes of under
$50,000 are worried
51 percent of women aged 60 and over are worried about outliving their savings
- 48 percent of Americans aged 60 and over, regardless of gender, are worried about outliving their savings
- 61 percent of Americans aged 60 and over with household incomes under
$50,000 are worried
59 percent of women aged 60 and over are worried about losing their independence
- 54 percent of Americans aged 60 and over, regardless of gender, are worried about losing their independence and almost half (46 percent) worry about becoming a burden to their families.
52 percent of women aged 60 and over are worried about becoming a burden to their families, a full 12 percent more than men
"Every day, 10,000 people in America turn 65 and nearly half of our population is already over the age of 60," said Chávez. "From our BenefitsCheckUp® website to falls prevention programs to chronic disease self-management and improving Medicare low-income beneficiary enrollment, NCOA is working with policymakers in
This survey is being released at NCOA's Age+Action Conference,
"Our recent NCOA/Ipsos survey of older Americans finds that most people 60 and older report being pretty happy with their current lives," reports
These are findings from an Ipsos poll conducted
About NCOA
About Ipsos
Ipsos is a global independent market research company. Our team of 18,000 across 90 countries serves 5,000 clients and undertakes 70,000 different projects each year. Our polling practice is a non-partisan, objective, survey-based research practice made up of seasoned professionals. We conduct strategic research initiatives for a diverse number of American and international organizations, based not only on public opinion research, but elite stakeholder, corporate, and media opinion research. Ipsos has been listed on the
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