The Future of Retirement
The Future of Retirement
Here is the latest The Future of Retirement report: Why family matters.
The Future of Retirement: Why family matters
HSBC's The Future of Retirement programme is a world-leading independent
study into global retirement trends. It provides authoritative insights into the key
issues associated with ageing populations and increasing life expectancy
around the world. Since The Future of Retirement programme began in 2005,
more than 110,000 people worldwide have been surveyed.
This report, Why family matters, is a supplementary report to the main 2011
report, The power of planning, the sixth in The Future of Retirement series.
Both reports highlight findings from a survey of more than 17,000 people in 17
countries.
The report is divided into five sections:
- Part 1 looks at how different family structures, working patterns and gender differences influence attitudes to retirement and people's aspirations for later life
- Part 2 looks at how responsibility for financial matters is divided up in households, and the need for women to get more involved in shared decision-making
- Part 3 focuses on the gaps in families' financial plans and demonstrates how many households are failing to adequately plan for all eventualities
- Part 4 looks at the risk appetites of respondents and reveals generally high levels of aversion to investment risk, particularly among women
- Actions: What families can do to better prepare for the future
The Future of Retirement: Why family matters
This report, Why family matters, is a supplementary report to the main 2011 report, The power of planning, the sixth in The Future of Retirement series. Both reports highlight findings from a survey of more than 17,000 people in 17 countries in December 2010.
Global Reports
Brazilian
Chinese
English
- 2011 Why family matters
- 2011 Why family matters print quality version
- 2011 The power of planning
- 2011 The power of planning print quality version
- 2009
- 2008 Print quality version
- 2008
- 2007
- 2006 World
- 2006 Business
- 2006 People
- 2005
- 2005 Business
French
Portugese
Spanish
Country Reports/Fact Sheets
Argentina
Brazil
Canada
China
Denmark
Egypt
France
Germany
Hong Kong
India
Indonesia
Japan
Malaysia
Mexico
Philippines
Poland
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
South Africa
South Korea
Sweden
Taiwan
Turkey
UAE
UK
US
Please note that there was no report created in 2010
