The gap between the retirement ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ has grown since the recession: Retirement account savings of families age 32–61 by savings percentile, 1989–2013 (2013 dollars)

50th (median) 60th 70th 80th 90th
1989 $0 $5,423 $14,461 $32,536 $90,379
1992 $0 $4,874 $16,248 $39,384 $90,987
1995 $2,277 $9,866 $24,286 $47,054 $113,841
1998 $6,004 $17,440 $38,597 $73,763 $160,106
2001 $7,879 $23,638 $48,326 $92,818 $223,247
2004 $6,166 $19,730 $49,326 $102,351 $246,628
2007 $11,228 $30,315 $61,754 $123,508 $258,243
2010 $5,358 $19,291 $42,868 $96,453 $246,490
2013 $5,000 $20,100  $50,000  $116,000  $274,000 

Note: Retirement account savings include 401(k)s, IRAs, and Keogh plans. Scale changed to accommodate larger values.

Source: Adapted from Figure 9 in Monique Morrissey, The State of American Retirement:
How 401(k)s have failed most American workers, Economic Policy Institute Report, March 3, 2016

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