Current:Home > NewsSignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:Suddenly unemployed in your 50s? What to do about insurance, savings and retirement. -Visionary Wealth Guides
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:Suddenly unemployed in your 50s? What to do about insurance, savings and retirement.
Will Sage Astor View
Date:2025-04-11 03:10:41
Editor's note: This column is SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Centerthe second in a two-part series on losing your job in your 50s. It was originally published in February 2019 and has been updated to reflect current news.
It's an event none of us wants to face, especially in our 50s: the day we lose our job.
The goals on that day are to determine the exact time your income stops, including the money available to you through unemployment benefits, and to resolve to cut household spending immediately. What you do in the first 24 hours will determine the amount of urgency you must adopt throughout the entire process of getting a new job.
Day Two of unemployment and beyond are simply an exercise in risk management. It’s a simple idea, but it's also complicated, frustrating, and unnerving in its execution. It breaks down into two primary areas:
Insurance
When you lose your job, you almost always lose insurance of all types. You can lose your health insurance, life insurance, disability insurance and, less frequently, long-term care insurance. Those losses are frustrating because you have to scramble to fill the gaps, and don’t forget you’re 50-something. Re-securing all of this insurance will be brutally expensive because of age and the health-based price points of insurance products.
Protect your family: Find the best life insurance policies of 2023
From what I’ve observed, facing insurance deficiencies is easier to ignore than facing income deficiencies, although they are almost certainly linked. This is because spending money on properly covering your risks (health, death, and disability) is a choice. You can ignore a choice. Finding yourself suddenly unemployed without income is not a choice.
Health insurance is likely to be your number-one priority after a job loss. The program that allows you to continue your coverage is COBRA, or the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act. It’s very helpful, although it generally feels expensive. This is because your employer is no longer subsidizing your premium. If the costs to take advantage of COBRA are too rich, take a look at Healthcare.gov for rates for the recently unemployed. Job loss is a qualifying event for securing coverage, but you have 60 days to do it through this provision. By the way, don’t wait 60 days. You should take some time to consider your options, but going uninsured when your old job’s coverage expires is a tremendously big risk, especially for someone in their 50s.
Depending on your family structure and your survivors’ needs, continuing your life insurance and disability coverage can be as important as health insurance. Determine whether your former group coverage has conversion/continuation privileges. If they don’t, talk to your insurance agent – yes, you need an insurance agent – about your options.
Watch your savings
The second major area of your financial life that needs tending is your assets and how you use them.
The reason I focused on reducing your monthly expenditures in my previous column is that when your income stops flowing, you need to take the pressure off of your assets.
When you have reduced income, or no income, nearly every unfunded commitment crescendos into an emergency. You may feel as though relief can come from your savings, investments, or home equity, but an awful reality exists for people who are 50 and unemployed. You will have less time to replenish your assets, as the majority of your career is now behind you. You have to be tremendously picky when it comes to tapping your savings.
I’ve long felt a person’s ability to distinguish an emergency from a non-emergency is the difference between financial stability and financial fragility. This is especially true when you find yourself 50 and unemployed.
Other steps when lose a job:Losing a job in your 50s is extremely tough. Here are 3 things to do.
Retirement?
Undoubtedly, my analysis of the financial challenges of being 50 and unemployed did not address some tangential challenges, such as age discrimination when hunting for a job, or finding yourself suddenly unemployed in your sixties.
However, these two additional scenarios certainly play into one of my biggest fears for anyone without work late in their career: capitulation retirement.
Capitulation retirement is when you give up on your career, justifiably or otherwise, and decide to retire. The fact that it seems like the best option you have doesn’t mean it’s actually a viable option. However, I have seen people pull off this move successfully. In my estimation, they are in the minority, but a sudden retirement has an outside shot at success. If you think retirement is the best option, do not make your final decision until you’ve talked to a financial adviser.
Peter Dunn is an author, speaker and radio host. The views and opinions expressed in this column are the author’s and do not necessarily reflect those of USA TODAY.
veryGood! (95953)
Related
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- College football Week 12 grades: Auburn shells out big-time bucks to get its butt kicked
- Kesha changes Sean 'Diddy' Combs reference in 'Tik Tok' lyric after Cassie's abuse lawsuit
- Trump receives endorsement from Texas Gov. Greg Abbott at border as both Republicans outline hardline immigration agenda
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Test flight for SpaceX's massive Starship rocket reaches space, explodes again
- Rosalynn Carter, former first lady, dies at age 96
- Jordan Fisher goes into ‘Hadestown’ on Broadway, ‘stretching every creative muscle’
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Want to save money for Thanksgiving? Here are some ideas for a cheaper holiday dinner
Ranking
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Severe storms delay search for 12 crew missing after Turkish cargo ship sinks in Black Sea
- BaubleBar’s Black Friday Sale Is Finally Here—Save 30% Off Sitewide and Other Unbelievable Jewelry Deals
- Full transcript of Face the Nation, Nov. 19, 2023
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Fantasy Football: 5 players to pick up on the waiver wire ahead of Week 12
- Verdicts are expected in Italy’s maxi-trial involving the ‘ndrangheta crime syndicate
- Shakira reaches a deal with Spanish prosecutors on the first day of tax fraud trial
Recommendation
2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
Counting On's Jeremiah Duggar and Wife Hannah Expecting Baby No. 2
Man fatally shot by New Hampshire police following disturbance and shelter-in-place order
Tributes for Rosalynn Carter pour in from Washington, D.C., and around the country
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Skip the shopping frenzy with these 4 Black Friday alternatives
Georgia deputy who shot absolved man had prior firing for excessive force. Critics blame the sheriff
Alabama police chief says department policies violated in fatal shooting of Black man outside home