People have been talking about the โgreat family wealth transitionโ for a while now. It revolves around the Baby Boomer generation which created significant wealth and whose cohort is now well into retirement age. Trillions of dollars were expected to flow from them to their children. But things havenโt happened as quickly as weโve all expected. Why?
First, letโs do some maths. The Boomer generation was born between 1945 and 1965, so they hit (or will hit) the retirement age of 65 between 2010 and 2030. That would put us right in the middle of the transitionary period. But are we even halfway there yet. Letโs do some more maths because very broad statistics about a group donโt always reveal the underlying themes. Letโs split the Boomer generation: group one is those in regular employment or with small, โma and paโ businesses. Group two are the business owners.
Group one might be 80%, but their average net wealth might be $2-5M. They are a very large group, and they are the ones more likely to think about retiring at 65. Group two are smaller in numbers, but as business owners, they have accumulated far larger net wealth. While group one may be a much larger number of prospective retirees, group two is much larger by dollar value. It is the impact of the second group that is therefore much larger on their families as well as their family wealth transition, so letโs focus on them.