[Respondent:] I am very comfortable. I mean, I really have been obsessive compulsive about making sure I have money. Once I stopped working full time, I didn't use credit cards. I didn't go into a debt again, except for my mortgage. I didn't spend more than was coming in. [Respondent:] With only social security as an income, you know, I've some retirement that I have to take out a couple times a year or something, so that's dwindling. My greatest hope is that I will not outlive my resources. [Narrator:] Both women who felt financially secure and those who felt insecure, said they were worried about having enough money for future expenses. And were particularly concerned about the cost of health care and housing as they age. [Respondent:] Maybe you can pay your mortgage or your rent, and you have your food, but there's this other thing I worry about, like I need hearing aids, I can't afford hearing aids. If I need dental care, I can't afford dental care. [Respondent:] I know I think about a lot is all the property taxes. It's enormous amount of money every year and even if you got your mortgage paid, you know, still have thousands of dollars to pay for taxes. [Respondent:] It seems like the cost of Medicare and your insurance is, you know, continually going up. Year after year after year. [Respondent:] No matter how careful you try to be with your money and you go day to day, if you get something that's really serious, you know and you need care, that could wipe you out in a minute. [Narrator:] Women in our focus groups largely agreed that more personal finance education would have helped them reach financial security in retirement. [Respondent:] My husband had a bad surgery, we got over a million dollars back on a lawsuit. (pffh) It's gone. Because I didn't -- [Respondent:] Didn't, yeah, have the education. [Respondent:] I didn't have the education. I didn't have -- I spent money. If I had money, I spent it and if I didn't, I didn't. And now I'm really in a hole. I mean, just, we should have education, I think when we're younger. [Narrator:] For more on what we found about women's retirement security, check out our report at gao.gov.
For more information, contact Charles Jeszeck at (202) 512-7215 or jeszeckc@gao.gov.
*Government Accountability Office: GAO provides Congress, the heads of executive agencies, and the public with timely, fact-based, non-partisan information that can be used to improve government and save taxpayers billions of dollars. Our work is done at the request of congressional committees or subcommittees or is statutorily required by public laws or committee reports, per our Congressional Protocols.
Pages: 1 · 2
More Articles
- High Inflation and the Outlook for Monetary Policy By Federal Reserve Governor Michelle W. Bowman
- The Stanford Center on Longevity: The New Map of Life
- Julia Sneden Wrote: Old Dogs, New Tricks
- How to Talk With Someone About COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy: "There's so much tension that people don't want to risk a relationship"
- Did Teenage 'Tyrants' Outcompete Other Dinosaurs? "Dinosaur communities were like shopping malls on a Saturday afternoon jam-packed with teenagers"
- Julia Sneden: Lessons From a Lifetime in the Classroom: YOU AND I, ME, US, THEY, THEM, WHATEVER! (and “Mike and I’s wedding”)
- US Census Report: Young Adults Living Alone Report Anxiety, Depression During Pandemic
- In the We Couldn't Resist Category: Just Icing on the Cake, Part One, by Roberta McReynolds
- Department of Justice Halted a Purported “ozone therapy” Center in Dallas From Offering Unproven Treatments for Coronavirus Disease
- Grab That Museum Pass! Could Arts Engagement Have Protective Associations With Survival?