Advisors who want to serve all of a particular client's needs should make sure they are well-versed in philanthropic planning. A survey released Thursday by Merrill Lynch and Age Wave found that retirees are more likely to give to causes and charities they care about than other age cohorts.
Retirees account for 31% of adults over 25, the report found, and contribute 42% of charitable donations and 45% of volunteer hours. Age Wave and Merrill Lynch believe volunteer hours will reach 58 billion hours over the next two decades among retirees, for an estimated $1.4 trillion in services. That, plus $6.6 trillion in charitable donations, and the total value of retirees' collective giving spirit will create an $8 trillion "longevity bonus," according to the report.
Today's report, "Giving in Retirement: America's Longevity Bonus," is part of a series Merrill Lynch and Age Wave have been conducting since 2013. Earlier iterations addressed challenges older Americans face with their families, work, health and homes as they get closer to retirement. The newest study was conducted in July 2015, with more than 3,600 respondents.
The study found two-thirds of retirees feel retirement is the best time to give back to causes they believe in, either through philanthropic efforts or volunteering their time. The study cited research from the Giving USA Foundation's 2015 giving report, which found total U.S. charitable donations reached a record high of $358 billion last year, 80% of which came from individuals and families.
A 2014 report by the Corporation for National and Community Service and the National Conference on Citizenship found Americans of all ages contributed 7.7 billion hours of volunteer time in 2013. However, three factors are coming together to create a longevity bonus from older givers: the sheer number of boomers entering retirement; longer life spans, and thus longer retirements; and higher rates of giving among older men and women.
Compared to other age groups, retirees have more time, savings and skills they've accumulated throughout their lives to make retirement an ideal time for charitable efforts. In fact, 84% of retirees in the survey said their skills were an important factor in their ability to give more than when they were younger.
The report found empty nesters have between 55 and 60 hours of discretionary time — time they aren't spending on work, educational activities, sleeping, personal care, household chores and caring for others — per week, and retirees have about 75 hours per week.
Compared to current retirees, boomers are more likely to research how a charity uses its funding before making a donation and to specify how their donations are used. Current retirees are also more likely to support religious or spiritual organizations, while younger generations prefer to volunteer or give money to animal rights, environmental or human rights organizations.
"This made us wonder if the 1.2 million not-for-profits in America have heard the wake-up call yet to the 65 million retirees who want to help, but want a certain set of condition met for them to do so," Ken Dychtwald, founder and CEO of Age Wave, said on a webinar discussing the results of the survey.
Pre-retirees said they think they'll miss their regular paycheck most after they retire, but the retirees in the survey said the emotional stimulation of social connections were the biggest thing they missed about working. Volunteering can help meet that need. Eighty-five percent of respondents said they made new friendships as a result of their volunteer work.
"If we can envision a future in which retirees are giving more to their communities, are giving more to their families, are sharing their wisdom and skills, then the entire narrative for the aging of America changes," Dychtwald said.
The report found that during their working years, respondents defined success by where they were in their careers or the size of their bank account, house or paycheck. In retirement, generosity was the most common measure of success — 85% cited it, compared with 15% of retirees 50 and older who said being wealthy was how they measured success.
Furthermore, retirees were motivated more out of gratitude than guilt for what they had: 54% versus 3%. By comparison, the Silent Generation was more likely to make donations because they felt they had a duty to do so.
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