“Retirement Readiness” is All About Income, Not Age
posted by Pam Villarreal @ 14:16 PM "The question isn't at what age I want to retire, it's at what income." ~George Foreman
I came across an informative article in Monday's Dallas Morning News, "Retirement Readiness." (This article is also available in the New York Times). Two financial advisors in North Carolina put their pre-retiree clients through a "boot camp" designed to prepare them for what it will feel like when they retire. It helps people determine if they will truly be ready to retire at the age they plan to do so. It got me to thinking about what retirement is really all about.
A recent New York Times article discusses whether the best time to retire is at 62 (early retirement) or at 70. Its conclusion: hold out as long as you can. This must, however, be taken with a grain of salt. Getting the timing of retirement right depends on several factors, and no two families are exactly alike.
For a single person, probably the most important question is how long do you plan to live? If you are "in poor health and probably won't live past 78," you might want to take benefits at early retirement, says the Times. Ideally, if you expect to live a long time and can work past retirement, then 70 is the best time to take benefits.
If long life is the expectation, but you can't work till 70, then 66 seems to be the magic number. This option is best even if a retiree has to use retirement savings to make it to 66 to file for Social Security benefits. That's because the increase in benefits gained by retiring at 66 instead of 62, eventually makes up for the savings used to make it to 66. Waiting any longer than 66, seems to exhaust savings too much to make up for higher Social Security benefits.
It looks like hand-wringing over 401(k) accounts is the new trend for 2009. On one hand, it is scary to look at those quarterly statements and see one-third of the balance virtually evaporated. On the other hand, 401(k) accounts have become somewhat of the scapegoat for anything that goes wrong with retirement planning. The way the media writes it and Congress talks about it, one would think that individual retirement accounts are a complete failure and that only government can effectively manage our retirement planning.
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