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Articles
Market Update - 30th November 2013
Australians overweight and unhealthy,  AIA
The insurance gap
Some more Financial Ratios
Market Update - 30th October 2013
Debt control in countdown to retirement
ASIC: web here to help
Merry Christmas to all our clients, your staff, family and friends.
Sound SMSF advice is critical
Insurance: too complex for the Internet?
Some Financial Ratios
SMSFs: the dos and don'ts
Market Update - 30th September 2013
Retiring SMSF baby boomers
Your retirement-savings check-up
C'mon Aussie, work longer!
A heart-to-heart client conversation
How to start saving for retirement
Do a budget
A selection of Liberal Party policies and discussion papers
Retirement-savings disaster looms
SMSFs and the cost factor
New SMSF trustees sign-up - by the thousands
Your retirement-savings check-up

 

How often do you check whether your retirement savings are on track to finance your planned standard of living in retirement?


 

 

 


     

 

 

Such check-ups are a crucial part of sound financial planning.

One of the most common times for a retirement-savings check-up would be when individuals enter the final decade or so before their intended retirement date.

Such a check-up may encourage you to really concentrate on maximising your super in the countdown to retirement and possibly to reconsider your target retirement date.

Ideally, of course, retirement-savings check-ups should be undertaken throughout a person's working life to see if the savings are growing adequately.

Ross Clare, research director of the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA), writes in the October issue of the association's magazine Superfunds that individuals and Government policymakers "perennially" ask the question whether retirement savings are on track.

In his cover story - headed Is super on track? - Clare writes that individuals are interested about whether they can afford their wanted retirement lifestyles. And policymakers want to know whether Australia's retirement savings will be adequate and whether some pressures will be taken off the age pension.

Clare notes that superannuation coverage and the amount of super savings have significantly increased since the introduction of the superannuation guarantee scheme in 21 years ago.

However, his article clearly shows that the latest super balances at the age of likely retirement are still markedly below the amount needed to finance what ASFA regards as a "comfortable" standard of living in retirement. This remains the position when the age pension is taken into account.

The latest ASFA Retirement Standard report estimates that a "comfortable" standard of living would cost a single person $41,197 a year or a couple, $56,406. (The issue of what constitutes a "comfortable" living standard is debatable.)

A table prepared by the Australian Bureau of Statistics for ASFA lists the average financial assets of employees aged 60-64 years of age in 2011-12 as: cash, $19,858; shares, $10,663; and superannuation, $183,254.

Are your retirement savings on track to meet your retirement goals?

By Robin Bowerman
Smart Investing
Principal & Head of Retail, Vanguard Investments Australia
15th October 2013



8th-November-2013

        
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