Rosy assumptions on retirement timing invite rude
financial surprise
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[August 09, 2018]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Working longer can
boost the odds of a secure retirement - that is an article of faith in
retirement planning circles these days.
But many people do not wind up working as long as they expect or hope.
And baking in too much optimism about career longevity to your
retirement plan can take a heavy toll.
A new research report by Morningstar warns that assumptions about
working longer actually can work against you - by considerable margins
in some cases - if retirement comes sooner and savings fall short.
“What people are doing is picking unrealistic ages,” said David
Blanchett, head of retirement research at Morningstar and author of the
report. “You might say that you want to work until 67, but a lot of
things can go wrong.”
Most formal retirement plans are built around a specific retirement age.
But health problems, job loss or just plain burnout often produce a
different outcome. Blanchett found that for anyone planning to retire
after age 61, the chances of meeting your income and standard-of-living
goals can fall sharply if you do not work at least to that age.
“In other words, if your plan predicts a 90 percent chance of meeting
your goals if you work until your late sixties, you might really only
have a 60 percent chance of meeting that goal,” he said in an interview.
There has been a general trend toward working longer in recent years.
Labor participation rates have jumped substantially among men and women
in their 60s and early 70s. Thirty-nine percent of men age 65 to 69 were
working in 2017, compared with 27 percent in 1990, according to an
analysis by the Urban Institute of U.S. Census Bureau data. Among women,
the comparable participation rate jumped to 29 percent from 17 percent.
Data on claiming of Social Security benefits also points toward delayed
retirement. As recently as 2004, half of all men and 55 percent of women
filed at age 62. But in 2016, just 32 percent of men and 37 percent of
women were filing at 62. The share of men filing at their full
retirement age - 66 - also jumped from 11.5 percent in 2004 to 17.9
percent in 2016. For women it rose from 7.5 percent to 12.6 percent
(https://reut.rs/2Kebif6).
ALTERNATE SCENARIOS NEEDED
But when it comes to individuals, numerous surveys point to the
unpredictability of actual retirement dates. (https://reut.rs/2zLey1A).
Blanchett reviewed one of the best available data sets - the University
of Michigan Health and Retirement Study (HRS). This is an especially
useful data set because it tracks a specific group of households over
time, allowing a comparison of when people predicted they would retire -
and when they actually did.
The HRS data suggests that planned and actual retirement ages align at
61, Blanchett reports. That is, people who plan to retire earlier than
that age tend to retire later, and those who plan to retire after 61
retire earlier than expected. Each planned retirement year (earlier or
later) results in a half-year difference in actual retirement age. For
example, people who plan to retire at age 69 likely will retire at 65.
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Barb Wald, 66, plays pickleball in Sun City, Arizona, January 5,
2013. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
Blanchett searched the HRS data for other predictors of whether people
will achieve their intended retirement age, such as gender or how
frequently they exercise. “Some were worthwhile, but only on the
margin,” he said. “By far, the most important predictor was the expected
age, and how far it varied from 61.”
Blanchett also looked at the probability of retirement plan success for
people who make it to their planned retirement ages against those who do
not. That was done using Monte Carlo analysis, which uses algorithms to
serve up a range of possible outcomes.
If you work with a financial adviser, your plan likely revolves around a
specific retirement age assumption. Blanchett’s findings suggest that
you have a conversation about "what if?" scenarios - run some
alternatives examining the impact of an earlier date. If you are a
do-it-yourselfer, most online planning tools can help you make alternate
projections.
But Blanchett’s key finding is that people need to save more, to protect
against overly optimistic assumptions of a delayed retirement. How much
more you should be saving depends on how long you hope to work and your
expected annual rate of withdrawal. For example, if you aim to work to
age 69 and withdraw 4 percent annually, the amount of money you are
saving now should be ratcheted up by 80 percent.
Is that realistic, considering the retirement saving shortfall most
workers already face? “The average saving rate is 3 percent now, and
many people could double that,” he said. “I know some people won’t do
that, but this data should at least get people thinking about making a
plan - you need to be conservative and realistic about your goals.”
But the risks of a working-longer plan also point to the importance of
Social Security for most retirement plans - the program is designed to
help people cope with risks such as premature loss of work and income.
Workers can file for benefits as early as age 62, but for some workers
facing an earlier-than-expected retirement, it will make sense to delay
claiming benefits even if it means using savings to meet living
expenses. This offers one of the best routes to higher retirement
income, since benefit amounts are increased 8 percent for every 12
months of delay.
“Social Security is the best source of retirement income we have -
period,” Blanchett said. “And the best thing you can do is delay filing
for benefits - you can’t beat the payout from delayed retirement
credits.”
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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