Does that 36% include stay at home parents?
Doesn't matter. Whether you work or not, you need to save for retirement. If you choose to stay home, you need to have a plan of some sort.
And like losing weight, there are some people who are at a REAL disadvantage - they have Hashimotos or some other hormonal issue that makes losing weight MUCH harder - for savings - they have very small incomes, have more than their fair share of setbacks (spend time ill or have ill relatives, face something like Katrina), and started life with a bad hand (grew up in poverty, didn't get the benefits of a good education or people who believed in them).
True, saving is easier for the people who have a big income, or the people who have no children, or the people who have no health problems . . . but that doesn't mean it's impossible for people who have challenges.
I've been quite upfront about how much my DH and I try to save, both on this board and in real life. At one point, it was 40% of our income, and we only crossed over $100k in income once, the year before I started working part-time and had our second child. We are in our late 30s and have a nice savings built up for retirement and college for the kids.
Yes, it's very possible -- if you've avoided debt and chosen to live a frugal lifestyle.
That's more frightening than having $0 saved?
It's more scary because a 20-something who hasn't started saving still has time on his side, whereas a 40-something with only $1000 can't count on the magic of compound interest.
Here's an example, which I pulled from the internet to illustrate the point:
Start saving as much as you can, as soon as you can. The earlier you start, the longer compounding can work for you. For example, a 20 year old who saves $200 a month until age 65 and earns exactly 6% on saved funds annually would have accumulated around $550,000. But a 40 year old contributing the same amount each month at the same earnings rate would have accumulated only $138,600 by age 65.
The news is a little better than the headline -- the 36% who said they have less than $1,000 saved were talking about retirement OTHER THAN defined benefit plans, so some of those, particularly the 25% in the 55+ group, may have pensions that weren't included.
Now that's true. The Baby Boomers largely have pensions. A person with a solid pension, Social Security, and a paid-for house will be perfectly comfortable. Since pensions have always tended to accompany relatively low-paying jobs, a person in that situation probably wouldn't be able to fly to Hawaii every year or buy a new car every time the whim strikes, but that person won't be forced to choose between medicine and food.
However, before you wail the demise of pensions, be sure you realize that they're a two-edged sword: To earn a pension that will actually support yourself in retirement, you typically must stay with the same company for 30+ years. That's not particularly attractive to young people today, and it's downright tough for two-career families (if one spouse is transferred, while the other needs to stay put for the pension). And since none of us know how long we'll live, none of us know really know whether we'll come out winners or losers in the pension game.