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chisue

Need More 'Ants' -- And Higher-Income Jobs

chisue
9 years ago

One of our KT members has posted about preserving her savings from an inheritance. This may reinforce her decision to not only keep what she has, but the need for her family to add to their savings.

The top story in today's Chicago Tribune Business Section cites two primary surveys to detail how how woefully unprepared the average American is for retirement. They use a 'typical' family, ages 55 - 64, with family income of $67K.

A Boston College study says this typical working household had saved an inadequate $120K in 2010. Now, the amount saved has shrunk to $111K. This will generate about $500/month income in retirement.

A survey by the Federal Reserve says people have saved so little that they will be dependent on Social Security for half of their income in retirement. That picture gets worse because they assume retirees will get pensions to provide another 25% of their income. (Really?)

Last year the average Social Security benefit was $1294/mo. The check is reduced to $1189/mo. by the Medicare Part B premium -- currently $105/mo.

How will the study's 'typical' family, currently making $67K a year, get by on $35K in retirement? I'm presuming each partner gets the average Social Security benefit, and together they get $500/mo from their $111K savings kitty.

To avoid this bleak future, the story says one needs to consistently save 10% of earnings towards retirement, starting early. A Vanguard study shows that only 12% of people currently put the maximum into their 401(k)'s, and 21% don't participate at all. (A possible reason is that they barely earn enough to live on -- or maybe they're 'Grasshoppers' who don't save or who constantly raid their savings.)

If you know how much you need to live comfortably now, you know what you need to live comfortably in retirement. You won't need less, although it may go for different things. Can you figure out how big your kitty needs to be? (In the study, the typical family's residential wealth is only 12% -- and you have to live *somewhere*.)

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