Debt-to-asset ratios tend to look similar for younger U.S. households whether or not the households have any retirement plan assets.
For older households, lack of retirement plan assets correlates with terrible debt-to-asset ratios.
(Related: Debt Rising Among Older Americans: EBRI)
Craig Copeland, an analyst at the Washington-based Employee Benefit Retirement Institute, has published data on U.S. households' debt-to-asset ratios in a new report on the correlation between households retirement savings and their debt loads.
Copeland used 2013 Census Bureau data. His tables can show whether people with retirement savings have debt, but not whether debt problems drained savings, savings problems led to high debt levels, or low income or other factors caused both high debt levels and low retirement savings rates.
One of his charts does that suggest that a dramatic fork in the financial road appears when workers are somewhere between the ages of 45 and 54.
Copeland prepared that chart by comparing debt-to-asset ratios for families with working household heads ages 25 to 64.
He compared the debt-to-asset ratios for families in different age groups, and he compared those with some retirement plan assets and those with no retirement plan assets.
Families with working heads ages 25 to 44 had debt-to-asset ratios somewhere around 40% to 50% whether they had retirement plan assets or not.