Sentences with phrase «serious about retiring»

She brought it up to her manager, so her manager should go back to her and say, «Jane, were you serious about retiring this summer?
Whether Aldo is serious about retiring nobody will know until that official announcement comes.
«Get a good handle on what your expenses are, and if you're really serious about retiring early, you need to save a lot of your income,» McCurry said, adding that about 50 percent would be an ideal savings ratio.

Not exact matches

Many of your readers are probably interested in retiring early and want to know when they can be serious about taking the plunge.
The EU probably felt like it had to react to the accusation that Eurozone countries were paying for privileged Greek pensioners to retire at younger ages than everyone else, but these proposals have a lot more to do with convincing international speculators about the future viability of the Euro than a serious plan for pensions policy.
If you're writing a serious action movie and you're thinking about including the ol' remove - the - bullet scene, please see what they do with it in «Game Night,» and please recognize it's time to retire that cliché forever.
More from Personal Finance: Workers don't know how to answer this question about their 401 (k) Five ways for 50 - somethings to get serious about planning for retirement Women retire with a $ 1 million earnings gap.
So if even we can't retire before 60 — actually we choose not to — then why are young Canadians who have yet to get serious about saving even dreaming about early retirement?
Also, with many of us Baby Boomers now caring for elderly parents, you should have some serious reservations about retiring if you expect many years of financial support will be required for them.
As a (now retired) electrical engineer (NYS Professional licensed) knowledgeable about power generation who has watched the challenge of meeting our energy needs over decades I can state with some expertise that the US is in a serious bind as to meeting our nation's energy needs.
The system succeeded in meeting this demand, but the way it did so, through increased use of conventional energy, and in spite of mediocre to poor performance from renewables, has raised serious questions about the country's ability to withstand similar shocks in the future, when much conventional capacity, mostly coal, will have retired without replacement.
Following on from over 40 years service, Mr Chittenden has since retired from Law due to ill health however speaking recently about matters, he confirmed that his mind said «you have to do this» and whilst he always risked serious repercussions, he was «proud» of what he did and was «in the greater interests of justice».
I'd like to retire from my next job, so I'm serious about permanancy and security.
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