We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode An economic insecurity story

An economic insecurity story

2025/6/9
logo of podcast Marketplace All-in-One

Marketplace All-in-One

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
A
Amelie Zinn
C
Chris Farrell
D
David Brancaccio
H
Henry Epp
J
Jennifer Malinsky
L
Lina Zhu
N
Nancy Marshall-Genzer
S
Sandy Brager
S
Stephen Blitz
Topics
David Brancaccio: 我观察到退休后无房贷的房屋所有权正变得越来越稀有,这暗示着一种经济上的不安全感正在加剧。 Nancy Marshall-Genzer: 我报道了美中贸易谈判的最新进展,双方正在努力解决关税和出口限制等问题,以缓解经济紧张。 Henry Epp: 我分析了投资者在市场不稳定时期涌入货币市场基金的现象,指出这些基金因其低风险和相对稳定的回报而受到青睐。尽管股票市场有所回升,但投资者仍然普遍感到谨慎,这推动了他们寻求更安全的投资选择。 Stephen Blitz: 我强调了货币市场基金当前提供的收益率,认为在通货膨胀的背景下,这些基金能提供实际回报,因此对投资者具有吸引力。 Sandy Brager: 我指出,投资者受到快速变化的新闻周期和市场不确定性的影响,导致情绪波动,难以做出投资决策,因此更倾向于保守的投资方式。 Chris Farrell: 我深入探讨了退休人员面临的房贷负担问题,指出越来越多的老年人在退休后仍在偿还房贷,且欠款额大幅增加,这反映了一种经济不安全感。这种现象与过去退休前还清房贷的传统观念形成鲜明对比,给老年人的财务状况带来了额外的压力。 Jennifer Malinsky: 我强调,对许多人来说,退休后还背负房贷并非一种财务策略,而是一种无奈的现实,特别是对于那些收入较低的老年人来说,这会加剧他们的经济困境。 Lina Zhu: 我补充说,虽然对富裕的房主来说,背负房贷可能是一种战略选择,但对大多数老年人来说,这并非战略选择,而是迫于经济压力。 Amelie Zinn: 我强调,面临住房成本压力的老年房主更容易受到意外开支的影响,如健康问题或房屋维修等,这会进一步加剧他们的财务风险。

Deep Dive

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

This podcast is brought to you by LHH, the Global Talent Solutions and Advisory Company. What does work really mean? For many, it's just transactional, functional. But LHH believes it can be more. Work isn't just about tasks and deadlines. It's about passion, people, and possibilities. With the right guidance and vision, incredible things can happen at work. Finding the perfect hire, nurturing talent, making the ordinary extraordinary.

LHH doesn't just find beautiful moments at work. LHH creates them. Recruitment, development, career transition. LHH, a beautiful working world. Learn more at LHH.com slash beautiful. Hey, if you're listening to this, I will assume you're at least interested in money, understanding the economy and finances as well. And some of us now want to get the next generation interested as well.

So check out Million Bazillion, Marketplace's award-winning kids podcast that breaks down money to help dollars make more sense. Tune into Million Bazillion wherever you find your favorite podcasts. A whole new season is out now. Million Bazillion is presented in partnership with Greenlight, the debit card and money app for kids and teens. Greenlight helps kids and teens learn to earn, save, spend wisely, and invest. When you sign up for a Greenlight account at greenlight.com slash million.

Is owning your house, no mortgage, debt-free during retirement becoming a rare luxury? I'm David Brancaccio in Los Angeles. First, reps for the U.S. and China are talking trade today in London. It's about tariffs, but not only tariffs. Marketplace's Nancy Marshall-Genzer is following the story.

The U.S. delegation to the talks includes Treasury Secretary Scott Besson, U.S. Trade Representative Jameson Greer, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. They're trying to convince China to relax controls over its exports of rare earth minerals. Beijing wants the U.S. to relax its limitations on American exports of computer chips and parts for nuclear power plants.

China's economy has been showing signs of strain. Chinese exports to the U.S. fell more than 34 percent in May, the biggest decline since February of 2020 at the start of the pandemic. The two sides are trying to build on progress they made during talks in Geneva last month when they agreed to a 90-day pause on triple-digit tariffs they imposed on each other earlier in the year. I'm Nancy Marshall-Genzer for Marketplace.

When they're nervous about markets and the world, investors like to take away risk and put money into cash. Not cash cash, but often money market funds. The interest rate is negligible, but the amount doesn't really zig or zag.

And during one week this month, investors poured more money into money market funds than at any time since late last year. Sixty six billion dollars in one week. Marketplaces. Henry Epp has more. Money market funds typically invest in short term securities, federal and municipal bonds, mostly in some cases, corporate bonds, too. Those are investments that are considered a low risk. And right now they get a pretty good return, says Stephen Blitz, chief economist at T.S. Lombard.

If you put in a money fund and you earn between four and four and a half percent,

That's good money against inflation. It's a real return. And so it's attractive to people. Especially at a time when other investments have been swinging around a lot. But even though stocks have risen in the past month, a lot of investors are feeling cautious, says Sandy Brager with the wealth management firm Aspiriant. The news cycle changes so much. And so I think there's more emotion in investors' minds and there's more uncertainty about what to do. And I think that's paralyzing a lot of people.

And it's pushing many of them towards safety, like money market funds. But those might not be the right choice for everyone, Rager says. They make more sense for older investors who are nearing retirement and don't have as much time to take risks with their money. I'm Henry Epp for Marketplace.

Invest Puerto Rico supports this Marketplace podcast. What's next in innovation? That's not the right question. It's where? Puerto Rico. More than just a tropical paradise, it's innovation's paradise, where startups and global players coexist in a vast and vibrant ecosystem, where talent runs deep, highly skilled, and bilingual. Plus, the island offers the most competitive tax incentives in the U.S. If you believe your business can go anywhere, Puerto Rico is the place.

Find out more at investpr.org slash podcast. This Marketplace podcast is supported by Greenlight. As a listener of Marketplace, you're likely already building smart money habits for you and your family, trying to instill important lessons on saving and spending and the economy overall and the younger folks in your life. But what about the older generation? Your parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles? As they age, they may need more support in managing their finances too.

With Greenlight's Family Shield, you can take the next steps by protecting your senior loved ones from scams and financial fraud. Family Shield offers account monitoring, real-time alerts, and coverage, including up to $100,000 for deceptive transfer fraud and $1 million for identity theft, so you can keep your whole family financially safe and sound.

And with added safety tools like SOS and crash alerts, along with location sharing, you can keep an eye on both your family's wallet and their well-being. Take care of your whole family, from kids to grandparents, with Family Shield from Greenlight. Sign up today at greenlight.com slash marketplace.

Mortgages make up about 70% of household debt. We're told to pay off that debt before retiring, but over three decades, data show more people are still paying their home loans after retirement, and what is owed has increased dramatically. This is an economic insecurity story. Marketplace's senior economics contributor, Chris Farrell, has this latest installment of our series on seniors and debt.

For homeowners, the dream of getting rid of the mortgage and saying goodbye to colleagues for the last time were once closely linked. The bond is best captured by the image of mortgage burning parties popular in the 50s and 60s.

The television show Mayberry RFD in 1969 aired an episode called Emmett's Retirement. Emmett gathers some neighbors in his handyman shop. In one hand is a blowtorch. His other hand holds his bank mortgage statement. Gentlemen, you are now witnessing that great American ceremony known as burning the mortgage. No kidding? Oh, that's great, Emmett. Yeah. Yeah? Yeah.

That little old house is now all free and clear. Emmett tells his friends he can now retire and go fishing. Mortgage burning parties are something of a relic. Over the past three decades, the share of homeowners ages 65 to 79 with a mortgage rose from 24% to 41%, while median mortgage debt surged by 400%. That's according to the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University.

Among homeowners 80 years and older, the numbers are even more dramatic. The share with mortgages jumped from 3% to 31%, and median mortgage debt increased by 750%. For a lot of people, I think this isn't a choice. It isn't a financial strategy. It's more of a reality.

Jennifer Malinsky is director of the Housing and Aging Society program at Harvard's Housing Center. Her insight is echoed by Lina Zhu, research analyst at the Urban Institute. For wealthier homeowners, maybe carrying a mortgage debt might be a strategic choice. But for many, most of the senior or older adults, it's a strategic choice.

The number of so-called cost burden older adults is at an all-time high. That means they are spending 30% or more of their income on housing, utilities, taxes, and insurance.

Jennifer Malinsky. 97% of older owners with mortgages who are lower income have an income under $25,000 are cost burdened, meaning they're paying more than 30% of their income for housing. Older cost burdened homeowners are at financial risk. Amelie Zinn of the Urban Institute says they're vulnerable to unexpected expenses.

There could be a health shock. There could be an issue with their home, especially, you know, as they're living in homes that maybe they haven't renovated in a while or they've been in that home for, you know, 30 years or so or 25 years paying off that mortgage. And they're going to need to, you know, cover a roof repair, fix it, you know, AC unit. There could be a flood or a storm, especially with, you know, increased climate change and severe climate catastrophes and events. The mortgage debt story mirrors the broader trend toward more older adults entering retirement in debt.

Debt repayments can hike financial stress and vulnerability, especially for those of modest means. The struggle to cover debts leaves them with less money for essentials like food, health, and home maintenance, let alone fun. I'm Chris Farrell for Marketplace. Our Buy Now, Pay Later on seniors and debt is in partnership with NextAvenue, a nonprofit news platform for older adults produced by Twin Cities PBS.

Markets Dow and S&P futures are down by less than a tenth of a percent. NASDAQ futures are little changed at this juncture. We come into this week with the average fixed rate home loan mortgage up 6.97 percent. In Los Angeles, I'm David Brancaccio. You're listening to the Marketplace Morning Report from APM American Public Media.

Really quick before you go, please complete a short anonymous survey by going to marketplace.org forward slash survey. It should only take about 10 minutes. And as a token of our appreciation, you can enter your name to win a $75 gift card when you've completed the survey. You do all of us at Marketplace a huge favor by filling it out.