Latino women admitted that they did not know
enough about retirement planning and wanted to learn more, a study found.
Not exact matches
If you're worried that you won't have
enough income for the lifestyle you want in
retirement, you might want to discuss with a financial advisor or insurance professional
about the potential benefits of using annuities as part of your overall
retirement plan.
Ideally, that's
about 5 (or more) years before you hope to retire, when
retirement is close
enough to know what you want it to look like, and yet far
enough away that there's still time to hone your strategy to help meet those goals or alter your
plans.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Onondaga County's
plan to cut spending with
retirement incentives saved
about $ 7.7 million, but it wasn't
enough to avoid layoffs.
If you are concerned
about having
enough money for your
retirement, tools such as the MoneySmart
Retirement Calculator will help you work out if there is a shortfall in your
plan.
We actually don't get
enough of the time we'd like to make decisions
about retirement planning, meal
planning and lesson
planning.
The general wisdom when it comes to saving
enough for
retirement is to
plan to replace
about 70 to 90 percent of your pre-
retirement income through savings and Social Security.
By going through this process every year or so — and refining your budget estimates as you gain more information
about your spending needs — you should be able to get a pretty decent picture of whether you'll have
enough to retire at the age you
plan or whether you might be better off scaling back your
retirement lifestyle or even postponing
retirement a bit so you can build a larger nest egg.
Ideally, that's
about 5 (or more) years before you hope to retire, when
retirement is close
enough to know what you want it to look like, and yet far
enough away that there's still time to hone your strategy to help meet those goals or alter your
plans.
The best way to start investing is to learn
about your employer's
retirement plan, and contribute
enough to fully utilize the employer matching.
I'm not surprised by his conclusions at all, because most people I know just aren't that interested in following the markets closely
enough to become good at picking stocks, but most people DO have
retirement plans with stocks in them, so the result would seem to be really that most people aren't great at things they aren't very interested in (and don't know much
about).
If you're worried that you won't have
enough income for the lifestyle you want in
retirement, you might want to discuss with a financial advisor or insurance professional
about the potential benefits of using annuities as part of your overall
retirement plan.
The biggest regret those of us in our 50s and 60s have
about our later years is not having
planned early
enough for our
retirement years.
«How much lawyers need in
retirement depends on their own circumstances and needs, but what is clear is that many lawyers have an idea of what they would like to have after they finish work, but don't understand
enough about pensions to make effective
plans to achieve it.
If you're worried that you won't have
enough income for the lifestyle you want in
retirement, you might want to discuss with a financial advisor or insurance professional
about the potential benefits of using annuities as part of your overall
retirement plan.
Sign up for your employer's
retirement plan if you qualify for a company match; talk to your human resources department if you're unsure
about a match and contribute at least
enough to receive your full company match.