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Displaying 31 - 45 of 46 news clips related to this topic.
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Forbes

Writing for Forbes, AgeLab director Joseph Coughlin examines the impact of the increasing number of adult children who are living with their parents. “This evolving trend is not just about the changing definition of young adulthood, it is also about the changing definition of life stages across the life course, including retirement,” writes Coughlin.

Forbes

A study from the MIT AgeLab shows that people who take out student loans for their children or grandchildren typically decrease the amount they save for their own retirement. “[I]f one’s loan obligations extend all the way into retirement age, then the time to begin saving may never arrive,” writes AgeLab Director Joseph Coughlin for Forbes.

Forbes

AgeLab Director Joseph Coughlin writes for Forbes about the similarities and differences between retirement and summer vacation for kids. “Retirement positively dwarfs summer vacation in the amount of time involved—yet many peoples’ plans for retirement look a lot like plans for a summer vacation,” writes Coughlin.

Forbes

In an article for Forbes, Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, provides tips for adult children planning to have difficult conversations with their parents about such topics as driving and housing. “Hanging up the keys or leaving the family home often places two sets of critical values at odds – freedom versus safety,” writes Coughlin.

Forbes

Writing for Forbes, AgeLab Director Joseph Coughlin examines the importance of retirement planning, based off of a recent conversation he had with a Lyft driver. “Today’s retirement planning story must also add several chapters of imaginative, yet realistic, planning that go well beyond financial security and goal-setting alone,” writes Coughlin.

The Wall Street Journal

In an article for The Wall Street Journal, Senior Lecturer Robert Pozen writes that Congress should pass legislation allowing small employers to band together to provide employees access to a common retirement plan. Pozen notes that the new plan “also ought to further reduce the retirement-coverage gap by addressing the needs of part-time and seasonal employees.”

Science

Writing for Science, Prof. Richard Larson writes about his decision to enter semiretirement as a professor, post-tenure, a position at MIT aimed at creating more positions for rising academics. Larson writes that after investigating the impacts of eliminating the mandatory retirement age for tenured faculty he realized he was inadvertently “blocking the way of many young scholars who seek academic careers.”

Forbes

An MIT AgeLab survey finds that many Americans have unrealistic expectations for retirement, writes Richard Eisenberg for Forbes. Research scientist Chaiwoo Lee suggests that financial advisers use the survey results to “create messages and images and materials for potential clients and provide clients with a better education about life after career.”

The Economist

The Economist reports on a new method for retirement income developed by Prof. Robert Merton and his colleague at France’s EDHEC Business School.

Forbes

Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, writes for Forbes that lifelong education is a key component to job security and retirement planning, highlighting MIT’s online education offerings and MicroMasters programs. “People with the willingness and agility to learn new skills…are the most resilient players in an economy defined by sudden technological shifts and the rapid accumulation of new knowledge.”

CNBC

In an effort to make it easier for Americans, in particular Latinos, to save for retirement, MIT alumnus Carlos García launched Finhabits, a “bilingual digital platform that gives investment advice and teaches and encourages individuals how to invest and save for retirement,” writes Kristina Puga for CNBC. 

Forbes

Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab director, writes for Forbes about how many people are fearful of a “retirement future in which they are no longer meaningfully involved in the world.” Coughlin and his colleagues found that retirement FOMO (Fear of Missing Out), “may be leading many to delay retirement or, in some cases, to avoid the subject altogether.”

Forbes

John Wasik of Forbes explains Prof. Robert Merton’s funded retirement ratio, which determines whether an investor will have enough retirement funds based on money saved, rate of return, and planned retirement. Checking this number allows time to improve it by “saving more, working later and adding more stocks to your portfolio,” explains Wasik. 

MarketWatch

In this MarketWatch video, Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, explains how investors can ensure they save enough for retirement. In addition to regularly putting aside money, Coughlin advises that millennials should also invest in core skills and professional development “so that they are able to stay in the workforce for as long as possible.” 

CNN Money

Money reporter Penelope Wang writes about a new study by Prof. James Poterba that examined why Americans often did not have enough money saved for retirement. The researchers found that, “how much subjects had the first year their assets were measured showed the strongest determinant of the amount of the wealth they had at the end of life.”