11 Reasons why you Need to Plan from the book 'The Truth About Money' by Ric EdelmanThirty-five years ago, the financial planning profession did not even exist, yet today, hundreds of thousands of people claim to be financial planners (and some of them actually are!). What is financial planning, anyway, and is it really necessary? After all, your parents did not plan for their future - so why should you? The reason your parents did not plan is the same reason you have not packed for Europe: You are not going! Likewise, our parents and grandparents never planned for their future for the simple reason that they were not going to have one. Why worry about developing cancer at age 88 if you are going to be dead of tuberculosis at 45? Since people were not expecting to live past 65, there simply was no need for planning. Today, of course, things are different. And among these differences is the need for financial planning. Here are 11 reasons why you need to plan. Reason 1 - To protect yourself and your family against financial risksNotice the word financial. As a financial planner, I cannot protect you from the risks you face in life - no planner can - but I can protect you from suffering the financial loss that may result when any of those risks become reality. What are those risks? The four major ones are injury, illness, death, and lawsuits, and you will learn how to manage and reduce those risks in Part XI. Lawsuits? You bet! For perspective, the odds that your house will burn down are 1 in 1,200 - yet according to Forbes magazine, the odds are just 1 in 200 that you will be sued at some point in your lifetime. Reason 2 - To eliminate personal debtFor some people, a proper goal is to become worthless. If you owe lots of money to credit cards, auto loans, and student loans, becoming worthless would be a real improvement. You must move from owing money to owning money. Indeed, total consumer debt in this country (excluding mortgages) exceeds $1.4 trillion, according to cardweb.com. Its research reveals that Americans hold an average of 8 credit cards each, with an average balance of $8,400 per card. You have heard the joke about "running out of money before you run out of month", but it iss not so funny to run out of money before the end of your life! You must make sure you do not outlive your income, and that means you have got to accumulate assets so you can support yourself for a lifetime. That is impossible to do if you have debts, so you must eliminate them. Reason 3 - Because you're going to live a long, long timeAt the time of the American Revolution, life expectancy at birth was 23 years. By 1900, Americans were expected to live only to age 47. Thus, throughout most of our nations history, almost everyone worked; there was no such thing as retirement. Today, though, life expectancy tables from such diverse groups as the IRS, life insurers, the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention all say roughly the same thing: A child born in 2004 has a life expectancy of 77 years (up from 47 in 1900); a 77-year-old today is expected to live to 88; an 88-year-old to 94; and people who reach 100 are expected to live to 103. Soon, half of all deaths in the U.S. will occur after age 80. These life expectancies are a big part of why we need to plan. How Old Will You Be in 2100? The ridiculous part of all those life expectancy tables is that they all assume that life expectancies will remain at current levels. But that is not likely to be the case. Indeed, research suggests that people will continue to live longer and longer. In fact, even those as old as 45 today might be alive in the 22nd Century. Why are these figures important? Well, to determine how much money you will need in retirement, you need to project how long that retirement might be. Based on the actuarial data provided by various government agencies, most financial planners assume their clients will live to age 90, and conservative planners (my firm included) use age 95 (because the longer you live, the more money you will need). However, even "conservative" figures like age 95 could be too low. Based on the relatively new fields of gerontology, microbiology, and biotechnology, some believe that in the year 2050, people could be expected to live to age 140. No typo there: That is one hundred forty years of age. This is not science-fiction. In 2050, your kids could still be having kids. For example, in 2050, I will be 92. Will I make it? Well, that is still nine years younger than the age my Grandmom Fannie reached - and she was born in 1899. Let us face it: For many of us, 2050 is a done deal. If that is not startling enough, try this: It is now being suggested that lots of us who are here today could see the year 2100. The implications for society boggle the mind. Let us look closer at what such long life spans could mean. You Will Have Multiple Marriages First, you would be likely to have four or five spouses during your lifetime. Like all the other futurisms to follow, this one is not as far-fetched as it may first appear. After all, 75% of all married Americans eventually find themselves single again - either through divorce or death of their spouse - and most people who were married once eventually remarry. Thus, we are already a multiple-marriage society. It will just become more so: More people will do it and more people will do it more often. (After all, can you imagine marrying someone at age 20 and living with that same person for the next 120 years!? Honey, I love you, but...). You will Have Multiple Careers Second, you will have five or six careers. You willl go to school, get a degree, develop expertise in a given field, devote yourself to it for 20 or 30 years, then quit and start again, doing something entirely different. Think that is crazy? Millions of military retirees, police officers, firefighters, and schoolteachers already do this. They "retire" at 40 or 50 with 20 or 30 years of service and, with their monthly pension checks in the mail, they head off to new challenges. This strategy will become more common in the new millennium and the phrase "double-dipper" will give way to "quintuple-dipper" as people have five or six 20-year careers in their lifetime. The notion of "retirement" as we know it today will fade away. For more on this, read Rule 88 of The New Rules of Money.
You Will Extend Your Rites of Passage As our lifetimes become extended, so too will our rites of passage. As recently as 1960, marrying in your late teens was common; the phrase "old maid" applied to women who failed to marry by age 20. You were expected to have children (plural) before you were 25, Jerry Rubin told us not to trust anyone over 30, middle age and mid-life crises hit at 45, and the "elderly" were 65. As I bet yours does, my own life provides examples of this brave new world: My former college roommate is no closer to marriage now than when we were in school; my oldest brother will be 72 when his youngest daughter graduates from medical school; one of my nieces has three daddies (one biological, one marital, and one legal); my 77-year-old father has renounced retirement (for the fourth time); and my grandmother defied the actuaries when she passed at 101. If today is trends continue unabated, the year 2050 will find people marrying (for the first time) at age 50, having kids in their 60s (in France, they already are), facing middle age in their 80s, retiring in their 120s, and dying in their 140s. These prognostications remind us that financial planning is a process, not a product. A financial plan must be periodically reviewed, with its assumptions challenged and altered based on changes in the economy and in your circumstances. One key circumstance is the fact that you may live much longer than you envision. If you plan to retire at 65 and are assuming a life expectancy of age 90, you are assuming a 25-year retirement. But what if you live to 140? Will you have enough income for a 75-year retirement? Finally, who is going to pay for it all? This question suggests that the most politically explosive social issue in America today the right to life will evolve into a new debate. In the 21st Century, with people living for so many years beyond their resources, with society forced to pay the tab, some will argue that those who cannot take care of themselves in old age, those who are living in pain or discomfort, those who do not have a family or support group on whom to rely, and those who cannot afford to pay for their care should have the right to choose death. To some, Dr. Kevorkian is evil, deserving of the 10-to-25-year prison sentence he received in 1999. To others he was a godsend, and to the remainder, he was a mere curiosity. Whatever you think of him, one thing is certain: Dr. Kevorkian is a prelude to the future. In the year 2050, his cause will be center stage as the nation deals with the next great social debate: euthanasia. Welcome to the 22nd Century. I hope you will be ready. Reason 4 - To pay for the costs of raising childrenYou are earning - and you will continue to earn - a huge income. Take a 35-year-old making just $3,000 a month. Even without salary increases, that is more than $1 million in career earnings! While that might sound like good news, it actually works against us. When making a lot of money, people often develop an attitude that says, "Gee, with this good income, life will take care of itself. It did for my parents. It did for my grandparents. It certainly will for me." The issue, however, is not how much money you earn, but how much you keep. Look at the money your parents and grandparents earned over their careers. How much do they have left? You easily could have little left from a lifetime of work, because you don not get to keep all the money you earn. You have expenses - lots of expenses. Can you name your biggest expense? Children! Reason 5 - To pay for universityGuess what happens when the kids turn 18? They go to university! It is estimated that, for a baby born in 2002, the cost of college in 2020 will be $100,000 for an in-state school and $265,000 for private and out-of-state schools. To learn the proper way to approach the cost of college Reason 6 - To pay for a daughters weddingAnd if you made the foolish decision to have daughters instead of sons, get ready for another major expense: The wedding! According to Conde Nast Bridal Group, the average cost is $22,360; Washingtonian magazine puts it at $28,000. Reason 7 - To buy a car The average price of a new car is $26,670, according to the National Automobile Dealers Association. Thus, that purchase is one of your biggest - and most confusing - financial decisions. Should you pay cash, accept dealer financing, or use home equity? Reason 8 - To buy a home We devote the largest portion of our incomes to housing. Consequently, how you handle the purchase of your home will have far-reaching implications on virtually every facet of your financial life, including your ability to save, pay for college and plan for your retirement. Reason 9 - To be able to retire when - and in the style - you wantConsider food. Assuming you and your spouse retire at 65 and live to your normal life expectancy of 85, you are going to eat 43,800 meals in retirement! (That is three meals a day, 365 days a year over 20 years for two people.) If each of those meals costs five dollars, you will spend $219,000 on food. Where will that money come from? Most people are ignorant of this message. Of today is retirees 65 and older, 39% have incomes below $15,000 a year, according to the Social Security Administration. I am not saying these people never earned more than $15,000 a year while they were working. Rather, their income dropped below $15,000 when they retired. Only 15% of retirees earn more than $50,000 a year. Yet the masses did not plan to fail. They simply failed to plan, because under the old rules, planning was not necessary. It used to be that a worker and his family could be comfortable if he retired at 62 on a pension and Social Security. That does not happen anymore. Today, you do not retire as young as 62 - unless you have been downsized out of work. And you are going to live much longer than your parents and grandparents did, are not you? Therefore, your money must last much longer. And that is the dilemma: If you fail to plan, you face the possibility of a retirement filled with poverty, welfare, and charity. A Gallup survey showed that 75% of workers want to retire before age 60, yet only 25% think they will. That suggests people do not know how they are going to achieve their goals. One thing is sure, it is not going to happen by itself. It is going to require effort and attention. Reason 10 - To pay for the costs of long-term carePrior generations did not have to deal with the costs of long-term care, but we must: Of those who reach age 65, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services and Americans for Long-Term Care Security, 40% will spend time in a nursing home and 5% will require long-term care at some point. The average annual cost of a nursing home now exceeds $61,000; neither your health insurance nor Medicare will pay for it. The result: A growing number of senior citizens today are supported by others because they do not have the money to care for themselves. Reason 11 - To pass wealth to the next generationThis is more difficult than ever before, because living longer means it is increasingly likely that you will spend your money before you have the chance to bequeath it. Economists call this transference of wealth. Historically, money was passed from father to son. It started with our immigrant ancestors, who built homes and had children. When the children married, they moved into the house with Mom and Dad. Then the kids had kids, making it three generations in one house. As the family grew larger, each generation built new rooms, increasing the size - and the value - of the families wealth. When the first generation died, the second generation inherited the house, later passing it to the next generation, with each growing more affluent than the previous one. That does not happen today. We do not have three generations living in one house as often as we once did. Today, when our grandparents die, we are more likely to sell their house because we have our own home and we do not need theirs. Furthermore, we find that our grandparents live so much longer than before - longer than they expected - that they often run out of assets and have nothing to leave to their children. Therefore, instead of passing wealth down to the children, the kids send money up to the parents. Thus, in many cases, the transfer of wealth is going backwards, and economists worry that most Americans are not prepared for this reality. It is for all these reasons - to protect against risk; to eliminate debt; you are going to live a long time; to handle such major expenses as children, college costs and weddings; to buy cars and homes; to afford a comfortable retirement; to protect against long-term care costs; and to pass wealth to your heirs - that you need to create a financial plan. |