If you have decided not to retire, you can join the growing club. Two out of three between the ages of 45 and 60 plan to delay retirement, according to a report from the Conference Board.
These days many middle class Americans are struggling to make ends meet. More than half, 52 percent, say their most important day-to-day financial concern is paying the monthly bills.
Younger Americans in their 30s are now the group most likely to doubt they will be financially secure after retirement, a shift from three years ago when baby boomers nearing retirement age expressed the greatest worry.
New Jersey State Senator Shirley Turner is accusing state officials of playing roulette with public sector worker's retirement money by placing dangerous investment bets on high risk hedge funds.
The economy continues to slowly get better - but a new study finds a growing number of families in Jersey and across the country are tapped-out - in worse financial shape than they've been in several years.
If you haven't started saving for retirement, you're not alone. A study by the Employment Benefit Research Institute finds that a majority of workers have less than $25,000 in savings.
So the U.S. Census Bureau has shared with us the latest chapter in the ongoing story, "The Greying of America". Now they say that more of us than ever are likely to see the age 90. The Bureau also says our 90-plus population has tripled in size since the year 1980. There are now almost two-million American age 90 or older. And the census says the 90-somethings will swell in numbers to ei