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Articles
We wish all our clients a Merry Christmas,a Happy New Year and a restful holiday
A great overview of investing and good Holiday reading.
The final nail in the coffin for LRBAs?
Market Update – November 2014
Online financial tools your family and friends can use.
Overcoming our behavioural barriers to saving
‘Unintended consequences’ threaten SMSF tax reform
Retirement income: every bit counts
ASFA continues to sound warnings on retirement savings
Market Update - October 2014
The little-known rule with huge implications for self-managed super funds
Grappling with the uncertainties of retirement
Change to ATO decision relevant to SMSF in-house assets
Taking a personal perspective on the global super challenge
Some terms defined - Super & Investment
The perils of market-timing and over-confidence
Market Update – 30th September 2014
Hardly a do-it-yourself job
Super insurance: wide coverage, limited understanding
ASIC eyes SMSF loan sign-off
Redesigning retirement incomes policy - from the ground up
Grappling with the uncertainties of retirement

A central challenge when saving for retirement is to grapple with ...


 ... the uncertainties about how your needs may change after eventually leaving the workforce.



  

     

 


First, there is life expectancy. It makes much sense to save for a long retirement, particularly given that life expectancies are markedly rising.


But, of course, half of us will outlive our average life expectancy, half of us won't.


Second, spending patterns typically change as retirees grow older, becoming less active and frailer as the years go on. However, spending patterns can significantly vary between retirees even with similar levels of retirement savings. Much depends on personal circumstances including health.


Ross Clare, director of research for the Association of Super Funds of Australia (ASFA), writes in the October issue of the association's magazine Superfunds about the challenges when planning for retirement given increasing longevity and varying spending habits.


Clare's article is largely based on his recent research paper Spending of Older Retirees, to be published on ASFA'S website.


"While no two individuals will have identical expenditure patterns," he writes, "governments, policymakers and individuals need to have a standard measure of expenditure in retirement on which to base their decisions."


The current quarterly ASFA Retirement Standard estimates what it would cost 70-year-old retirees to have "modest" and "comfortable" standards of living. (The calculations are based on the assumption that the retirees own their home.)


Obviously, the matter of what constitutes a "modest" and "comfortable" living standard is, of course, highly debatable with much depending upon personal circumstances and expectations.


In recognition of the longer life expectancies of Australians, Clare's research contrasts the estimated cost of financing these standards of livings for 90-year-olds against those of 70-year-olds.


A "comfortable" standard of living is estimated to cost a 70-year-old single person $42,433 a year ($37,665 for a 90-year-old) and $58,128 for a 70-year-old couple ($52,866 for a 90-year-old couple).
By contrast, it is calculated that a "modest" standard of living would cost a single 70-year-old retiree $23,363 a year ($22,529 for a 90-year-old) and $33,664 a year for a 70-year-old couple ($33,604 for a 90-year-old couple).


Older retirees tend typically spend more on assistance in their homes such as cleaning services and on medical care while spending less on transport and entertainment.


Retirement tends to be used as an all-encompassing description of the period spent after a person leaves the workforce. In reality, retirement is much more complex with many shades of grey.



By Robin Bowerman
Smart Investing
Principal & Head of Retail, Vanguard Investments Australia
09 October 2014


 




14th-November-2014

        
FuturePlan Partners Pty Ltd, ACN 097 032 114, Corporate Authorised Representative of
SECURITOR Financial Group Limited, ABN 48 009 189 495, AFSL and Australian Credit License 240687,
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