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Retire, Repeat, Regret? How Indian Parents Are Draining Savings for Grown-Up Kids


Updated: July 05, 2025 02:30

Image Source: Business Today
There is a quiet financial crisis brewing in India as retirees exhaust all their savings to take care of adult children, leaving them exposed in their golden years. Wealth planners are sounding the warning, calling this phenomenon a "financial time bomb" threatening the security of millions. With traditional joint family support eroding and pension cover woefully inadequate—pension fund assets at just 3% of GDP—Indian retirees are now well and truly "on their own". Rising healthcare costs, inflation, and the obligation to help with weddings, home purchases, or loan settlements are fast depleting retirement savings, pushing many to financial blackmail.
 
Key Highlights:
 
Medical expenses currently constitute 62% of the average retirement corpus; medical inflation increases by 14% annually.
 
88% of Indian workers lack formal retirement coverage, relying on individual savings or family assistance that is increasingly insecure.
 
Middle-class earnings are directed towards everyday spending and unforeseen emergencies, with little left for long-term investment.
 
Indian planners suggest that Indians save a minimum of 15% of gross monthly income for retirement—neither for children nor for marriage, but for retirement security alone.
 
The shortfall in retirement wealth will be $96 trillion by 2050, and the crisis is likely to hit scale in a decade.
 
Prospects:
 
Unless there are radical reforms and a shift in culture in favor of individual retirement saving, India's elderly face an uncertain future. Experts stress the need for disciplined investment, education on money matters, and resisting the urge to tap retirement savings for family needs, or risk a countrywide old-age poverty syndrome.
 
Source: Business Today, Economic Times, NDTV

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