There are some interesting studies and surveys being conducted of late about the way we are in a post-retirement world. The most recent one was conducted by the Society of Actuaries and the Actuarial Foundation. Now this group of professionals is not known for being liberal in their opinions about the future. With the sort of quips like the famous “an actuary will throw a 10 foot rope to a man drowning 11 feet from shore”, it is hard to buy their theory about how you will act once you do retire.
But they have made a contribution to the discussion that is worth considering. For instance, they have reported that we spend differently at various stages of our retirement. This is relatively easy to embrace.
Linda Stern, writing recently for Newsweek surmised their observations as a plan that moves though four phases: “(1) early retirement, when travel, home improvement, hobbies, and new wardrobes can raise expenses beyond workday levels; (2) midretirement, when people (and their spending) typically slow down; (3) late retirement, when spending and activity slows even more; and (4) end of life, when spending for health care and personal assistance can use up what’s left of a retirement kitty.” This is a fair enough assumption.
When we do retire, we do tend to spend more during those initial years. And because of that, we try an calculate just how much is enough so we won’t outlast our funds. This is often based on the 4% rule, an initial distribution that is adjusted upward as retirement continues based on inflation.
Because no one, not even the actuaries know how long we will live, whether we want to perserve some of those funds for our heirs, what the tax rate will be over those years and whether inflation will begin to rise significantly, this decision is incredibly difficult to make, even when you are close to retirement.
Arriving at retirement in good health, relatively debt-free and with some developed plans about where you live and how you intend to live in retirement can offset some of those later-in-retirement expenses that slow the consumption of that income.
Assuming that we will suddenly decide that a new wardrobe is needed, home improvements should begin and hobbies will eat up a portion of the initial distribution also assumes that the retiree hasn’t fully understood the concept of fixed income. Making those “personal improvements” while the future retiree is still employed is a much better retirement plan.
I think that this sort of forward thinking should be based on how you invested during your working years. To that end, they suggest starting out with a much higher 6% withdrawal and make o adjustments for inflation, in essence, allowing inflation to do the leveling of the retirement income. In many instances, it is inflation that slows those later years spending. That and age.
Restructuring how you invest while you are working can be key to the overall retirement plan. If you follow a plan that makes tax-deferred contributions up to 6-10% and then beginning a taxable account or a Roth IRA could have all the assumptions built right in. When you initially retire, a person could tap the taxed accounts first, avoiding the unknown tax rates and wait to draw down the tax-deferred accounts (401ks) until your retirement spending stabilizes. (My thoughts on adjusting how you invest for retirement with taxes in mind.)
This would give most of us a very clear view of what retirement will be like, what inflation will be and what tax rate we can afford.
Here is the article from Newsweek by Linda Stern