In contrast to the medical specialty of geriatrics, which focuses on the physical concerns of the later stages of life, gerontology is a multidisciplinary field that includes the social and psychological implications of ageing and longevity.
Cynthia Hutchins, Director of Financial Gerontology for Bank of America Merrill, stands for a portrait at home n Bel Air, Md. on Dec. 16, 2021. Hutchins educates the firm’s nearly 19,000 financial advisers on working with clients across all stages of life. (Ting Shen/The New York Times)
When Cynthia Hutchins started her career as a financial planner in the 1980s, the concept of “retirement” was simple and straightforward.
Most of her clients envisioned a few years of leisure after their full-time careers ended, with a pension, Social Security and perhaps a bit of savings providing steady support.
“When my grandmother retired, as an example, if you lived into your 70s that was considered to be a really good, long life,” Hutchins said recently over video chat from her home office outside Baltimore.
As the years went on, she noticed a shift in her conversations with clients at Merrill Lynch, where she worked as a retirement specialist.
The defined-benefit plans their parents had relied on were fading away, replaced by self-funded schemes that demanded a great deal more planning on the employee’s part.
©2019 New York Times News Service