Monday, August 06, 2018
New York Times: ‘Too Little Too Late’: Bankruptcy Booms Among Older Americans
For
a rapidly growing share of older Americans, traditional ideas about
life in retirement are being upended by a dismal reality: bankruptcy.
The
signs of potential trouble — vanishing pensions, soaring medical
expenses, inadequate savings — have been building for years. Now, new
research sheds light on the scope of the problem: The rate of people 65
and older filing for bankruptcy is three times what it was in 1991, the
study found, and the same group accounts for a far greater share of all
filers.
Driving the surge, the study
suggests, is a three-decade shift of financial risk from government and
employers to individuals, who are bearing an ever-greater responsibility
for their own financial well-being as the social safety net shrinks.
The
transfer has come in the form of, among other things, longer waits for
full Social Security benefits, the replacement of employer-provided
pensions with 401(k) savings plans and more out-of-pocket spending on health care. Declining incomes, whether in retirement or leading up to it, compound the challenge.
Cheryl
Mcleod of Las Vegas filed for bankruptcy in January after struggling to
keep up with her mortgage payments and other expenses. “I am 70, and I
am working for less money than I ever did in my life,” she said. “This
life stuff happens.”
As the study,
from the Consumer Bankruptcy Project, explains, older people whose
finances are precarious have few places to turn. “When the costs of
aging are off-loaded onto a population that simply does not have access
to adequate resources, something has to give,” the study says, “and
older Americans turn to what little is left of the social safety net —
bankruptcy court.”
“You
can manage O.K. until there is a little stumble,” said Deborah Thorne,
an associate professor of sociology at the University of Idaho and an
author of the study. “It doesn’t even take a big thing.”
The
forces at work affect many Americans, but older people are often less
able to weather them, according to Professor Thorne and her colleagues
in the study. Finding, and keeping, one job is hard enough for an older
person. Taking on another to pay unexpected bills is almost
unfathomable.
Bankruptcy
can offer a fresh start for people who need one, but for older
Americans it “is too little too late,” the study says. “By the time they
file, their wealth has vanished and they simply do not have enough
years to get back on their feet.”
The
data gathered by the researchers is stark. From February 2013 to
November 2016, there were 3.6 bankruptcy filers per 1,000 people 65 to
74; in 1991, there were 1.2.
Not only
are more older people seeking relief through bankruptcy, but they also
represent a widening slice of all filers: 12.2 percent of filers are now
65 or older, up from 2.1 percent in 1991.
The jump is so pronounced, the study says, that the aging of the baby boom generation cannot explain it.
Although
the actual number of older people filing for bankruptcy was relatively
small — about 100,000 a year during the period in question — the
researchers said it signaled that there were many more people in
financial distress.
“The people who show up in bankruptcy are always the tip of the iceberg,” said Robert M. Lawless, a law professor at the University of Illinois and another author of the study.
The
next generation nearing retirement age is also filing for bankruptcy in
greater numbers, and the average age of filers is rising, the study
found.
Given the rate of increase, Professor Thorne said, “the only explanation that makes any sense are structural shifts.”
Ms.
Mcleod said she had managed to get by for a while after separating from
her husband several years ago. Eventually, though, she struggled to
make ends meet on her income alone, and she fell behind on her mortgage
payments.
She collects a small Social
Security check and works at an adult day care center for people with
intellectual disabilities and mental health problems. For $8.75 an hour,
she makes sure clients participate in daily activities, calms them when
they are irritated and tries to understand what they need when they
have trouble expressing themselves.
“When
I moved here from Los Angeles, I was wondering why all of these older
people were working in convenience stores and fast-food restaurants,”
she said. “It’s because they don’t make enough in retirement to support
themselves.”
Ms.
Mcleod said she hoped that filing for bankruptcy would help her catch
up on her mortgage so she could stay in her home. “I am too old to move
out of here,” she said. “I am trying to stay stable.”
The bankruptcy project is a long-running effort now led by Professor Thorne; Professor Lawless; Pamela Foohey, a law professor at Indiana University; and Katherine Porter,
a law professor at the University of California, Irvine. The project —
which is financed by their universities — collects and analyzes court
records on a continuing basis and follows up with written
questionnaires.
Their
latest study —which was posted online on Sunday and has been submitted
to an academic journal for peer review — is based on a sample of
personal bankruptcy cases and questionnaires completed by 895 filers
ages 19 to 92.
The questionnaire
asked filers what led them to seek bankruptcy protection. Much like the
broader population, people 65 and older usually cited multiple factors.
About three in five said unmanageable medical expenses played a role. A
little more than two-thirds cited a drop in income. Nearly
three-quarters put some blame on hounding by debt collectors.
The
study does not delve into those underlying factors, but separate data
provides some insight. The median household led by someone 65 or older
had liquid savings of $60,600 in 2016, according to the Employee Benefit
Research Institute, whereas the bottom 25 percent of households had
saved at most $3,260.
That doesn’t
provide much of a financial cushion for a catastrophic health problem.
Older Americans typically turn to Medicare to pay their medical bills.
But gaps in coverage, high premiums and requirements that patients
shoulder some costs force many lower-income beneficiaries to spend more
of their own income on those bills, the Kaiser Family Foundation found.
By
2013, the average Medicare beneficiary’s out-of-pocket spending on
health care consumed 41 percent of the average Social Security check,
according to Kaiser, which also estimated that the figure would rise.
More
people are also entering their later years carrying debt. For many of
them, at least some of the debt is a mortgage — roughly 41 percent in
2016, compared with 21 percent in 1989, according to an Urban Institute
analysis.
And those who are carrying
debt into retirement are carrying more than members of earlier
generations, an analysis by the Employee Benefit Research Institute
found.
Perhaps
not surprisingly, the lowest-income households led by individuals 55 or
older carry the highest debt loads relative to their income. More than
13 percent of such households face debt payments that equal more than 40
percent of their income, nearly double the percentage of such families
in 1991, the employee benefit institute found.
Older Americans’ finances are also being strained by the needs of those around them.
A
little more than a third of the older filers who answered the
researchers’ questionnaire said that helping others, like children or
older parents, had contributed to their seeking bankruptcy protection. Marc Stern, a bankruptcy lawyer in Seattle, said he had seen the phenomenon again and again.
Some
parents, Mr. Stern said, had co-signed loans for $10,000 or $20,000 for
adult children and suddenly could no longer afford them. “When you are
living on $2,000 a month and that includes Social Security — and you
have rent and savings are minuscule — it is extremely difficult to
recover from something like that,” he said.
Others
had co-signed their children’s student loans. “I never saw parents with
student loans 20 or 30 years ago,” Mr. Stern said.
“It
is not uncommon to see student loans of $100,000,” he added. “Then, you
see parents who have guaranteed some of these loans. They are no longer
working, and they have these student loans that are difficult if not
impossible to pay or discharge in bankruptcy, and these are the kids’
loans.”
Keith Morris, chief executive
of Elder Law of Michigan, which runs a legal hotline for older adults,
said the prospect of bankruptcy was a regular topic for his callers.
“They
worked all of their lives, and did what they were supposed to do,” he
said, “and through circumstances like a late-life divorce or a death of a
spouse or having to raise grandkids, have put them in a situation where
they are not able to make the bills.”
For
Lawrence Sedita, a 74-year-old former carpenter now living in Las
Vegas, the problems began when he lost his health insurance about two
years ago. He said he had been on disability since 1991, when a double
pack of 12-foot drywall fell on his head at work.
After
his union, the New York City District Council of Carpenters, changed
the eligibility requirements for his medical, dental and prescription
drug insurance, he lost his coverage.
Mr.
Sedita, who has Parkinson’s disease, said his medical expenses had
risen exponentially. (A spokesman for the union declined to comment.)
A
medication that helps reduce the shaking — a Parkinson’s symptom — rose
to $1,100 every three months from $70, Mr. Sedita said. “I haven’t
taken my medicine in three months since I can’t afford it,” he added.
He
said he and his wife, who has cancer, filed for bankruptcy in June
after living off their credit cards for a time. Their financial
difficulty, he said, “has drained everything out of me.”
Copyright 2018 The New York Times. All rights reserved,
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