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- (Last updated 6/27/99)
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7/28/99
YOUNG BABY BOOMERS BUILD WEALTH SLOWLY AND STEADILY, STUDY
SAYS
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Forget the stories of average people becoming
overnight stock-market millionaires. A new nationwide study found
most young baby boomers are accumulating wealth the old-fashioned
way: slowly and steadily.
The study followed 6,810 adults for 10 years beginning when
they were in their 20s. Results showed that the typical individual
increased his or her net wealth by $2,394 each year. And while
most people were building at least some assets, the study found
13 percent of participants had no wealth or were in debt by the
time they were in their 30s.
"There may be a few people becoming rich quickly, but
the data show that doesn't happen to most of us," said Jay
Zagorsky, author of the study and a research scientist at Ohio
State University's Center for Human Resource Research.
"In most cases, wealth holdings plod along steadily,
growing a little bit each year."
The study, which appears in the current issue of the journal
Review of Income and Wealth, is based on data from the
National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. The NLSY is a nationwide
survey, conducted by Ohio State for the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics, which follows a group of people over time, visiting
each participant annually or biennially. In this study, Zagorsky
examined wealth-related questions asked of one group of participants
in the NLSY between 1985 and 1996. At the beginning of the period
covered by this study, participants were in their early to late
20s. By the end of the study, they were in their 30s.
Zagorsky was interested in measuring net wealth -- holdings
such as cash, homes, cars, stocks and bonds -- minus any debt
the individuals might have. He found that the number of young
baby boomers who had accumulated at least some wealth increased
from 80 percent when they were in their 20s to 87 percent when
they were in their 30s.
"We counted anyone who had even $1 more in assets than
debts to have wealth -- so it's troubling that 13 percent of
participants couldn't meet even that threshold by the time they
were in their 30s," Zagorsky said.
"If this trend continues, many individuals will have
few assets upon retiring and will have to rely completely on
government programs such as Social Security to support themselves."
Other findings of the study:
- As expected, the median assets of baby boomers grew steadily
with age. Median assets ranged from a low of about $1,500 for
28-year-olds in 1985 to a high of approximately $50,000 for 35-year-olds
in 1996.
- The number of young baby boomers with houses tripled during
the course of the study, from 21 percent when they were in their
20s to about 63 percent when they were in their 30s.
- The survey asked participants about retirement savings accounts
like IRAs and 401Ks only during the 1994 and 1996 interviews.
However, these holdings grew rapidly in that short time. For
example, the number of people holding 401Ks grew from 30 percent
in 1994 to 35 percent in 1996.
- Zagorsky said he was surprised by the number of respondents
who listed their own business among assets. In 1996, when respondents
were in their 30s, 13 percent said they had their own business.
Most of these were small ventures that provided the median business
owner less than one-third of his or her yearly income, Zagorsky
said. Still, it showed a strong entrepreneurial trend.
- The study found that unmarried men generally held more wealth
than unmarried females. However, married females generally held
more wealth than married males. The reason is that respondents
gave combined wealth data for both themselves and their spouses.
Women generally had spouses older than themselves, while men
had spouses younger than themselves. So women generally have
spouses who have had more time to save and have built up greater
assets.
- As baby boomers age, they shift more of their holdings from
illiquid assets to liquid assets. The percentage of young adults'
wealth tied up in illiquid assets fell from 66 percent when they
were in their 20s to 41 percent when they were in their 30s.
This is good news, Zagorsky said, because it means boomers have
more liquid assets available to convert into cash during financial
emergencies.
Zagorsky said studies such as this are important because researchers
know little about how young people begin building wealth. "Most
studies have focused on the very rich or the elderly, groups
who have finished accumulating the majority of their wealth,"
he said. "By focusing on young people, we can begin to see
how different individuals build wealth over time."
#
Contact: Jay Zagorsky, (617) 713-4447; Zagorsky.1@osu.edu
Written by Jeff Grabmeier, (614) 292-8457; Grabmeier.1@osu.edu |