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Retirement

The Retirement Readiness Disconnect: What Employers See Versus What Workers Fear

by Economic Report
September 13, 2025

Imagine clocking out for the last time after decades of grinding through paychecks and promotions, only to stare down a future where your nest egg barely covers the basics. That’s the quiet dread gnawing at millions of American workers right now. A new report from PNC Bank lays bare a stark divide: 78 percent of employers pat themselves on the back, convinced their teams are set for a secure retirement. Meanwhile, just 45 percent of those same employees share that confidence. This isn’t some abstract poll—it’s a symptom of how the ground has shifted underfoot in the American dream of golden years.

Over the past few decades, the old promise of a company pension footing the bill has faded into memory for most private-sector folks. Back when defined-benefit plans ruled, employers shouldered the risk, guaranteeing a steady check each month no matter how the markets twisted. Today, it’s mostly do-it-yourself territory with 401(k)s, where workers funnel pretax dollars into accounts that employers might match—a perk, sure, but one that demands discipline and foresight from the get-go. Nonprofits lean on 403(b)s, governments on 457(b)s or the Thrift Savings Plan for feds, and smaller outfits often stick to simpler setups like SEP IRAs. A few union gigs and public roles still cling to those rare traditional pensions, but they’re outliers in a sea of self-directed savings.

This setup sounds straightforward on paper, yet the reality hits harder. Employers gauge success by the tools they’ve rolled out: shiny apps for projections, auto-enrollments that nudge contributions higher each year.

But as Kelsey Szamet, a partner at Kingsley Szamet Employment Lawyers, puts it plainly, “Employers tend to equate retirement readiness to the benefits being offered—a 401(k), an employer match or contribution, and possibly their investment in planning tools as well.”

She nails the blind spot here. Bosses tally up participation rates like scorecards, assuming a full roster of contributors means everyone’s on track. Workers, though? They’re tallying something else entirely.

Szamet drives that home further: “Employees’ perception is far different, and they can see their stagnant wages, rising cost of living and competing financial obligations.”

Wages that barely budge while grocery bills and rent climb? That’s not paranoia—it’s math. Inflation has chewed through purchasing power, with everyday costs up 20 percent since 2020 alone, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Add in student loans averaging $37,000 per borrower or childcare tabs that rival a mortgage payment, and suddenly that 5 percent match feels like a rounding error.

“Employers see employee participation, so they assume employees are ready,” Szamet continues. “However, there are many employees who simply cannot contribute enough to be secure.”

It’s a brutal truth: showing up to the game doesn’t mean you can afford the buy-in, especially when half of U.S. households live paycheck to paycheck.

The numbers back this up in cold detail. A fresh Natixis Investment Managers survey out this month reveals Americans face a nearly half-million-dollar shortfall in their retirement pots—$1.048 million is what they figure they’ll need, but that’s a pipe dream for most. Even worse, between 20 and 46 percent of folks have zero tucked away for their later years, with low-income families hit hardest. The Federal Reserve pegs it at 16 percent of working adults with no retirement assets at all. And access? Nearly half—47 percent—of private-sector workers, or 59 million people, don’t even have an employer plan to join. For those in their 20s, who ought to be stacking savings early, the average 401(k) balance hovers around $100,800—double what benchmarks suggest for their age, but still a fraction of the $1.26 million experts say you’ll need for a comfortable 2025 retirement.

Part of the problem lies in plain sight: not everyone knows the playbook. Megan Yost, a senior vice president of thought leadership and insights at Segal, points out how even well-intentioned features fall flat without buy-in.

“Employees may lack awareness of what’s available to them and may not take full advantage of their entire benefits package,” she says.

Auto-escalation sounds great—bump your contribution by a percent annually until you hit 10 or 15 percent of pay—but if you’re oblivious to it amid the daily scramble, it’s worthless.

Yost expands on the load workers carry: “While employers provide tools to help employees plan for retirement, many employees bear the responsibility for figuring out how to make it happen.”



Employers glimpse the spreadsheets of aggregate savings rates, but they miss the messy backdrop: crushing debt loads averaging $103,000 per household, or the 40 percent of parents who skip meals to cover kids’ needs. Without that full view, optimism from the C-suite rings hollow.

Then there’s the head game retirement plays. It’s not just dollars and cents; it’s the weight of what comes next. Kristina Muller, a workplace mental health therapist, gets into that territory: “Employers offer more tools than ever before, but we need to make sure these tools are matched with the skills of an aging workforce who may not know how or where to use them.”

Picture a baby boomer eyeing a robo-advisor dashboard, fumbling through menus designed for tech-savvy millennials. Or Gen Xers buried in Excel sheets, second-guessing allocation amid market dips.

Muller’s words cut deeper still: “It brings up our primal fears around mortality and the end as we know it, and in many ways, retirement can feel like a very real first step toward it.”

That existential chill explains why one in five Americans over 65 keeps punching the clock—a near doubling from 35 years back, per Pew Research. Longer lifespans mean planning for 20 or 30 post-work years, not 10, and with healthcare costs projected to eat 15 percent of a retiree’s budget, fear isn’t irrational; it’s survival instinct.

Layer on the elephant in the room: Social Security, the safety net that’s starting to fray. The latest Trustees Report projects the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund running dry by 2033, forcing an automatic 21 percent cut in benefits unless Congress acts. That’s a decade away, but for today’s 50-somethings, it’s tomorrow. The program’s 75-year shortfall looms large, driven by demographics—fewer workers propping up more retirees—and costs that outpace payroll taxes. Without reforms like tweaking the retirement age or broadening the tax base, that monthly check many count on could shrink just when it’s needed most.

Advisor Bullion Numismatics

So where does that leave us? Employers aren’t wrong to tout their packages; they’ve stepped up in a system that asks more of them than it used to. But workers aren’t whining without cause—the cards are stacked with eroding wages, ballooning expenses, and a pension graveyard. Bridging this gap demands more than apps and matches. It calls for straight talk in break rooms about real numbers, not just opt-ins. Financial literacy baked into onboarding, not buried in HR portals. And on the bigger scale, policies that tame inflation and shore up entitlements before the cliff arrives.

For the individual staring at their latest pay stub, the message is clear: Start small, stay consistent. Max that match—it’s free money—and treat your 401(k) like the lifeline it is. The chasm between boardroom confidence and water-cooler worry won’t close overnight, but ignoring it guarantees a rough landing. America’s workers have always rolled up sleeves; now’s the time to do it for the long haul.

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For Emergency Preparedness, Don’t Forget the Meds

Being prepared is more than just a good idea—it’s essential. We stock up on non-perishable food, bottled water, flashlights, and first-aid supplies, but one critical aspect often gets overlooked: access to vital medications. What happens if pharmacies close, prescriptions can’t be filled, or you’re cut off from medical care during an emergency?

That’s where Jase Medical steps in, offering a reliable solution to ensure you and your family have the medications you need when it matters most.

Jase Medical specializes in emergency preparedness kits designed to provide peace of mind through physician-reviewed, prescription medications delivered right to your door. Their flagship product, the Jase Case, is a comprehensive emergency antibiotic and medication kit priced at $289.95.

This kit includes 10 essential medications—five life-saving antibiotics and five symptom relief meds—that can treat over 50 common infections and illnesses, from urinary tract infections and pneumonia to skin infections and traveler’s diarrhea. With 28 add-on options available, you can customize the kit to fit your specific needs, including a KidCase for children ages 2-11.

The process is straightforward and hassle-free. Simply visit Patriot.tv/meds, complete an online evaluation, and have your order reviewed by a board-certified physician. Once approved, the medications are shipped discreetly from a licensed pharmacy to your U.S. address (with plans for Canada shipping coming soon). Each kit comes with detailed Med Cards outlining symptoms, dosing, and usage, making it easy to administer even in high-stress situations. These medications are shelf-stable and designed for long-term storage, empowering you to handle medical emergencies without relying on external help.

For those on the move, Jase Medical also offers the Jase Go kit for $129.95, a compact travel med kit covering over 30 common conditions encountered during adventures or trips. And for ongoing needs, Jase Daily provides an extended supply of your prescribed chronic medications to safeguard against disruptions in supply chains or extreme weather events.

Don’t just take our word for it—thousands of satisfied customers have given Jase Medical a 4.9-star rating, praising its role in true preparedness. As radio host Glenn Beck warns, “The supply lines for antibiotics already are stressed to the max. Please have some antibiotics on hand… You can do it through Jase.”

Whether you’re prepping for a hurricane, a power outage, or simply the uncertainties of daily life, Jase Medical ensures you’re not caught off guard. Head to patriot.tv/meds today to customize and order your emergency kit—because when it comes to your health and safety, it’s better to be prepared than sorry.

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