Women Boosting Savings, Investments as They See Recession Ahead: Survey
What You Need to Know
A new survey finds that more than two-thirds of women said they expected a U.S. recession.
Over ninety percent of respondents said they planned to maintain or increase contributions to their retirement accounts.
The survey also found that a majority of working women were ready to make short-term sacrifices for their financial futures.
Sixty-eight percent of women in a new survey expect a U.S. recession, but they are redoubling their efforts to secure their financial futures, HerMoney and the Alliance for Lifetime Income reported Monday.
The survey, part of the organizations’ State of Women in 2022 study, examined women’s economic outlooks and the trade-offs they say they are willing to make to maintain control of their financial futures.
Facing a cloudy economic outlook, 92% of respondents said they plan to maintain, or even increase, their contributions to retirement accounts, including IRAs and 401(k)s.
“Despite believing a recession is on the horizon, women aren’t letting that interfere with their long-term financial goals,” Jean Chatzky, HerMoney’s chief executive and a fellow at the Alliance for Lifetime Income, said in a statement.
“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. should enter a recession, women in the survey said they are willing to be conservative elsewhere. Only 5% would borrow for big purchases, while 71% said they would put off big purchases entirely and 24% would pay only in cash.
The online survey was conducted from Oct. 4-17 among some 1,100 women who were members of the HerMoney community. They ranged in age from 18 to 75 and older; most were college educated and employed full time; and nearly two-thirds were married or partnered.
Controlling Purse Strings and the Clock
Eighty percent of respondents said they preferred to make financial decisions themselves rather than defer to a decision-making partner. This preference was the same for both partnered and single women.
That said, participants indicated that they did not mind sharing the breadwinner role. The sample was split nearly 50/50 between those who are the primary breadwinner in their household and those whose partner is.
In addition, women are also overwhelmingly focused on taking control of their time, according to the survey. Sixty-one percent of respondents said they would prefer to earn 10% less money and have 10% more time than sacrifice their time to earn more.