Don't Wait to Plan Your Retirement
By David N. Chazin In conjunction with Sagemark Consulting, a division of Lincoln Financial Advisors, a registered investment advisor. Mr. Chazin is a regular contributor to PlannerConnect
Most of us find it easier to earn and spend money than to save it. Planning and saving for retirement too often take a back seat to other priorities. Why is procrastination the rule, rather than the exception when it comes to retirement planning? I've heard many reasons from my clients: thinking about retirement makes them uncomfortable; they're too busy to find time to plan for retirement; they're too young to worry about retirement; and retirement planning is too complicated. If you find yourself making similar excuses for avoiding some serious thinking about retirement planning, it's time to change your tune.
Saving for retirement has become a more pressing concern than ever before. Companies are putting the burden of funding pension plans largely on their employees, the Social Security system is straining under the burden of an aging population, inflation erodes long-term investment returns, and life expectancies are longer. Aging baby-boomers are feeling particularly squeezed -- many are trying to save for their children's college educations and their own retirements, while supporting their elderly parents at the same time.
Personal savings will have to fill the gap between your pension and government benefits on the one hand, and your retirement needs on the other. Surprisingly, people earning higher incomes aren't immune to the realities of retirement savings. In fact, the 2003 Retirement Confidence Survey, conducted by the Employee Benefit Research Institute, found that fewer than 4 in 10 of today's workers have actually calculated the amount of money they will need to have saved prior to retirement and 29% of workers say they have not saved for retirement at all.
Setting Goals
Setting specific goals should be at the heart of your overall retirement planning strategy. That means figuring out when you want to retire and what kind of lifestyle you realistically expect to maintain in your golden years. Those answers will, in turn, help you determine how much money you'll need at retirement.
One rule of thumb says that in each year of retirement you'll need 70 percent of your annual pre-retirement income. Of course, your financial needs may be more or less, depending upon your individual circumstances. While you can't predict the rate of inflation or the return on your pension investments over the next several years, a financial planning professional can help you make some projections of how these factors will affect your savings plan.
Investments
If your projections show you'll have a financial shortfall in retirement, you have several choices: retire later, retire on less, save more, or attempt to improve your rate of return. If the first three options aren't practical or desirable, you should consider investments that have the potential to improve your rate of return if you can tolerate the risk.
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