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Gen Zers are socking away 14% of their income for retirement


The nation’s youngest workers appear to be taking the save-for-retirement message to heart, research suggests.

Defined as workers ages 18 to 25, Generation Z is saving an average of 14% of their income for their golden years, according to new study from BlackRock. Among millennials (ages 26-42), Gen Xers (ages 43-55) and baby boomers (ages 56-75), the average is 12%.

However, the overall share of workers across all ages who think they’re on track with their retirement savings has fallen to 63% from 68% in 2021, the research shows. Retirement plan sponsors’ confidence also is down: 58% say their employees are on the right path, compared with 63% last year.

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“Retirement confidence is down for the first time in a few years,” said Anne Ackerley, head of BlackRock’s retirement group.

“Even in the pandemic, it stayed [the same], but we’ve seen it come down across all generations due to inflation and market volatility,” Ackerley said.

Confidence is highest among Gen Zers

Broken down by generation, though, Gen Zers have the most confidence in their savings (69%), followed by boomers at 65%, and both millennials and Gen Xers at 60%.

The research for BlackRock’s “Read on Retirement” report includes input from 305 plan sponsors, 1,308 workplace savers, 1,300 independent savers and 300 retirees.

Why Americans are finding it more difficult to retire

“Gen Z was raised in households where there was a need to save for retirement … and the message is out there that you’re on your own, that you need to start saving early,” she said.

Another possible reason, Ackerley said, is that they may have watched family members struggle due to the 2007-2009 Great Recession — when job losses, home foreclosures and investment losses were widespread — and want to avoid similar financial challenges down the road.

Young adults are aiming to retire at age 63

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