RETIREMENT
PLANNING
A comprehensive retirement plan is the roadmap
that guides your financial decision-making throughout retirement.
This plan should detail every aspect of your financial life, showing
you how much money you’ll need each year, how much you’ll
take from each account, how much each asset is realistically projected
to grow each year, the impact of inflation, etc.
Most of the retirement
plans we make today cover 30 to 40 years. There are several ramifications
that follow from making
plans that cover such long time periods. One is that a small
change in one assumption can have ripple effects, with the
seemingly small change leading to large results. There are
four key assumptions that determine whether or not your plan
will be successful: your income needs through the years; inflation
rates; rates of return on your investments; and health-related
costs. Each of these assumptions must be carefully, and accurately,
input into the plan in order to create a map you can trust
to describe and direct your financial course of action.
Another
ramification of long planning periods is that there is more time
for something to go wrong. This highlights the
need to control risk very carefully. When we make a retirement
plan, our goal is to protect it from each and every worst-case
scenario. This might be an economic crises that occurs rarely.
However, if you are retired for several decades, you actually
have a high probability of going through one or more economic
tailspins that are considered quite rare when viewed from a
more short-sighted perspective.
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