Two-thirds of Women See a U.S. Recession Ahead, but Plan to Double-down on Retirement Savings

Staff Report

Thursday, November 17th, 2022

New research released today from HerMoney and the Alliance for Lifetime Income reveals that over two-thirds (68 percent) of women see a U.S. recession ahead. However, in these uncertain times—when just two percent say they doubt or don't believe a recession is imminent—women are doubling down to secure their financial futures.

The fifth chapter of the "State of Women in 2022 " study looked closely at women's economic outlooks and reveals some of the trade-offs they're willing to make to remain in control of their financial futures. The survey finds that despite a cloudy outlook, 92 percent of women plan to maintain, or even increase, their contributions to retirement accounts, including 401(k)s or IRAs.

"Despite believing a recession is on the horizon, women aren't letting that interfere with their long-term financial goals," said Jean Chatzky, Alliance for Lifetime Income Fellow and HerMoney CEO. "Not only do women say that they will stay committed to saving for retirement, two-thirds plan to 'double down' on their investments and adopt a now-is-the-time-to-buy mindset."

If the U.S. does enter a recession, women are willing to be conservative elsewhere. Only five percent of women would borrow for big purchases, while seven in 10 (71 percent) say they will put off big purchases entirely and another quarter (24 percent) would only pay cash.

Women in Control of the Purse Strings and Clock
Four out of five women (80 percent) prefer making the financial decisions themselves versus deferring to a decision-making partner. This is the same whether currently partnered or single.

However, they don't mind sharing the breadwinner role. Women are split nearly 50/50 on being the primary breadwinner themselves (51 percent) or having a partner who is the primary breadwinner (49 percent).

In addition, women are also overwhelmingly focused on taking control of their time. Notably, a majority (61 percent) would prefer to earn 10 percent less money and have 10 percent more time than sacrifice their time to earn more. Even more (74 percent) would prefer to earn less money in a low-stress job than to take on a stressful job to earn more.

Working Women Willing to Make Some Trade-offs
While women are less willing to sacrifice their time, a notable majority of working women are ready to make short-term sacrifices in the name of their financial futures:

Eyes on the end game: Seventy percent of working women would prefer to max out their annual 401(k) contribution than use $20,500 toward a short-term goal.
Savings over shopping sprees: Four out of five working women would prefer to max out their annual IRA contribution (80 percent) than purchase a $6,000 luxury item or experience (20 percent).
In general, working women say the top trade-off they make to be able to save for retirement is limiting purchases of luxury goods (79 percent). Millennials are the most likely to make other sacrifices. They're significantly more likely to limit memberships and subscriptions (61 percent) and make housing trade-offs (48 percent) than Gen Xers and Baby Boomers.

Upon reaching retirement age, the vast majority of working women say they would prefer to delay Social Security to increase their benefit over time (85 percent) than to take Social Security right away (15 percent).

"Our research finds that most women, especially as they age, prefer to have a portfolio that generates retirement income they can count on," said Jean Statler, CEO of the Alliance for Lifetime Income. "An overwhelming 83 percent of working women would choose a portfolio with reliable retirement income over a risky portfolio with potential for higher returns—jumping even higher, to 88 percent, among Baby Boomers. Women have told us time and time again that they prioritize saving and have peace of mind when they know they have enough protected income to last throughout retirement."