Retirement cannot be financed

What’s your retirement Plan?
Let’s play a small game.
Pick the odd one out:
- Home
- Vacation
- Car
- Retirement
- Education
- Dream Wedding
Could you figure the odd one
out?
It is retirement.
You can
take a loan for everything else but retirement. Hence, planning for retirement
should be on everyone’s top of mind. Starting to plan for retirement as early
as possible is the best way as you don’t have to stress about investing a considerable
sum of the money in the later part your life.
Everyone’s retirement plan and needs are
different. The size of the retirement corpus will not just depend on how much you
save and invest, but also how you want to spend after retirement. If you’re
going to live a frugal life, you may need to accumulate less than someone who
wants to pursue expensive hobbies or go on world tours after retirement.
As retirement is a long-term
goal, knowing how much to invest in the different phases of your life and how
much you should have invested until now are crucial steps in retirement
planning. There are various ways to find how you should have saved for retirement.
One method is the 80% rule. According to this rule, you need to have 80% of
your annual salary before retirement for each year. According to another
method, you should have saved 50% of your annual income towards retirement by
the time you hit 30, two times your salary by 40 years and four times by 50
years.
While these methods can help
us to have an idea on how much we need to accumulate as per our life stage, a
better way to do so would be to invest a proportion of the monthly income
consistently.
The FOMO Generation and Millennials
For the people who are fresh
graduates, may feel that retirement is in the distant past. Today, young people
believe in having experiences and have a ‘You Live Only Once’ attitude. Many don’t
want to invest for their retirement as they think it is a waste of money and the
entire invested amount will go down the gutters if they don’t survive till 60.
But what if you live?
People in the mid-20s to early
30s can start accumulating their retirement corpus by investing 5% of the monthly
income regularly. Investors can start investing regularly in a midcap fund or
ELSS funds through Systematic Investment Plan (SIP). Equity funds are
recommended as they give higher returns in the long run. As investors in this
stage have just started working, their earning potential may be limited. And if
they are staying alone in a big city, essential expenses such as rent and food
constitute a large chunk of their income. Hence, taking baby steps will go a
long way in accumulating the desired retirement corpus.
The Middle-Aged People
In the late 30s and 40s, the
earning capacity of individuals increases. By this time, many individuals would
have stopped job switching. They are also likely to have one or two kids. While
their earning capacity increases, so does their burden of financial
responsibilities. Whether it is taking care of their children’s education,
paying loan EMIs and insurance premiums, and vacations, all these
responsibilities constitute a large proportion of their income. Hence, individuals
who are in this stage should aim to save at least 10% of their income for retirement.
Also, one has to keep in mind to top up their investment amount as and when
they get an increment.
Almost near Retirement
In this stage, many of the
responsibilities would have been over. It is the time that your kids are most
likely to be in college, and they are on the verse to becoming financially
independent. Loans are most likely to be out of the picture by this time. With
the decrease in responsibilities, you can increase your investment to 15% of
your income or more. As an individual approaches retirement, say 55 years,
investors can shift their investments to a debt fund. The objective of the debt
funds is to protect capital. They can continue their regular investments in the
debt fund. This will help individuals to set up a systematic withdrawal plan (SWP)
in the debt fund and redeem a monthly sum of money to take care of the day to
day expenses after retirement.
To summarize, one can
gradually increase their investment in retirement. The key is to start
investing as early as possible.
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