Older Americans have actually been coping far better than younger ones
during the coronavirus pandemic, according to new research.The Edward
Jones and Age Wave Study goes where few have ventured before in focusing
exclusively on how different generations have held up emotionally and
financially in the months since all the lockdowns began. And some of its
findings are at least as startling as how quickly even 70-year-olds
came to love Zoom."COVID-19’s impact forever changed the reality of many
Americans, yet we’ve observed a resilience among U.S. retirees in
contrast to younger generations," said Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D., the founder
and CEO of Age Wave, a leading research think tank on aging, retirement
and longevity issues.While acknowledging upfront that the virus itself
disproportionally struck aging adults, the five-generational sampling of
9,000 people age 18 and over revealed more than a few surprises. Among
them:* While 37 percent of Gen Zers, 27 percent of Millennials, and 25
percent of Gen Xers said they’d suffered "mental health declines" since
the virus hit, only 15 percent of Baby Boomers responded likewise.*
Faring the best were those 75 and over – the Silent Generation that
followed the so-called "Greatest Generation" – with a mere 8 percent of
those respondents reporting any mental health deterioration. That would
seem to run counter, as does the results for Boomers (age 56 to 74), to
early dire warnings that prolonged social isolation made older adults
especially vulnerable to depression, anxiety and cognitive decline.*
Nearly 68 million Americans have altered the timing of their retirement
due to the pandemic, and 20 million stopped making regular retirement
savings contributions.Dychtwald attributed the two older generations’
resilience to their having "a greater perspective on life.""They’ve seen
wars and other major disruptions before," he said, "and they know that
this, too, will pass. Younger generations feel like,
‘What happened
to my life? I mean, I was supposed to go to college or I was starting a
new job, and now everything has changed.’"Most retired Boomers and
Silent Gens also had monthly Social Security checks to fall back on.
Which explains why – though the pandemic has significantly reduced the
financial security of a quarter of Americans – younger generations were
slammed the hardest: Nearly one-third of Millennial and Gen Z
respondents characterized the impact as "very or extremely negative,"
compared to 16 percent of Boomers and 6 percent of Silent Gens who
admitted to similar hardship.Looking for any silver lining that’s come
out of the COVID-19 crisis?Well, 67 percent of respondents did say it’s
brought their families closer together."The pandemic has certainly
thrown into sharp relief what matters most in our lives," said Ken
Cella, Edward Jones’s client services group principal. "And important
discussions have taken place about planning earlier for retirement,
saving more for emergencies, and even talking through end-of-life plans
and long-term care costs."And with the study also showing that an
overwhelming percentage of retirees yearn for more ways to use their
talents to benefit society, financial services firm Edward Jones
believes it’s time to redefine retirement more "holistically" to
encompass what it calls
"the four pillars"
of health, family, purpose and finance.Successfully addressing most of
those pillars admittedly takes more financial savvy than many of us
have, though, especially given ever-rising costs. But a
financial advisor, like a local one at Edward Jones, has the perspective, experience and empathy to help.
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