News

On average, people of color in the U.S. have less money saved for retirement than their White counterparts. More than half of Black and Latino/Latina households have no retirement savings ...
According to Morningstar, Black and Hispanic women contribute a lower percentage of their salaries to retirement accounts compared with their white counterparts, even after adjusting for ...
A Boston Indicators report finds that Black and Hispanic residents in Massachusetts are saving far less money for retirement than their white counterparts, perpetuating wealth gaps in the state ...
Retirement can feel like a ... layers of financial inequality. On average, Black women in America earn just 63 cents for every dollar earned by white men, a pay gap that compounds over a lifetime.
White Americans tend to have more assets at retirement than Black or Hispanic Americans. Just 35% of Hispanic families and 41% of Black families have savings in a 401(k) or IRA account ...
Black and Hispanic females contributed a lower proportion of their salaries than their white counterparts, impacting their long-term retirement savings prospects; Withdrawals before retirement: Black ...
Each week of February, HR Dive will publish a story in its Black History Month series. This week’s installment unpacks the challenges Black workers face preparing for retirement. While DEI ...
“Student loans impact our cash flow, which then means we have less to save toward retirement.” According to the Education Data Initiative, Black borrowers owe $25,000 more than White borrowers ...
Post-retirement cognitive declines were almost three times more acute among White Americans compared with their Black peers, and twice as large for men as for women. That’s according to a ...
Wide disparities exist between White and non-White future retirees—a "racial retirement wealth gap" Reviewed by Margaret ...