The Great Recession saw unemployment rates double and a housing bust that proved far stronger and lasted much longer than anyone had expected. Through it all, retirement savings plans took a major hit.
The economy is improving. But for baby boomers who can see the finish line of retirement in the not-so-far-off distance, the race is on to rebuild — or start over —with their retirement plans.
The clock is ticking. Finding work still isn't easy. Neither is finding safe investments with reasonable returns.
For Vilma Hart, 58, an unexpected layoff during the recession undermined her best-laid retirement plans.
"It was a rude awakening," said Hart, a former corporate trainer and Florida caseload manager who was let go by the state in 2008. "I could not find a job for a year and a half. I exhausted all my retirement savings."
Hart took a part-time job with the AARP Foundation in 2010 so she could scrape by with her bills and also watch over her elderly mother. She hopes to find full-time work, but also understands the challenges ahead. She has nothing saved for retirement now, and hasn't yet been able to start saving again.
"I have to adapt," she said. "I thought I had my ducks in a row but it didn't work out."
Hart is among the two out of every three baby boomers who are in some kind of unfavorable retirement situation.