Longevity is defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary as “a long duration of individual life.” It is also a key financial risk for older adults (i.e., not having enough saved and outliving retirement savings because this money has to last a long time). A recent study found that 63% of pre-retirees feared running out of money more than death vs. 46% of retired respondents.
Below are six take-aways about some recent seminars that I attended about longevity risk:
Ticking
Time Bomb- One speaker called longevity risk a “ticking time
bomb” in financial planning. Since longevity is a big unknown for most people,
nobody knows if longevity risk will affect them personally and, if so, what the
(financial) damage will be.
Time Horizon-
Most financial experts recommend a savings decumulation plan with at least a
30-year time horizon for people who retire in their mid-60s. It should include
essential living expenses, discretionary living expenses, and guaranteed
sources of income such as Social Security, an annuity, or a pension.
Couples Always Have a Survivor-
Surviving spouses may outlive their partner for a long time (think decades). They
must cope with issues such as lower trigger amounts for taxes on Social
Security and Medicare and reduced guaranteed income. For example, instead of
two Social Security checks, there will be one, along with a reduced (survivor)
pension benefit.
Guaranteed Income- Three
common sources of guaranteed lifetime income in later life are Social Security,
(increasingly rare) defined benefit (DB) pensions, and annuities. People
without a DB pension may decide to purchase annuities to create their own
“pension.”
Long-Term Care Risk-
There is a 70% chance that a person age 65+ will need long-term care (LTC) in later
life. Planning strategies to address this risk include purchasing a LTC
insurance policy, having adult children pay LTC insurance policy premiums,
self-insuring for LTC expenses from invested assets, and moving to a continuing
care retirement community (CCRC) where lifetime care is provided in exchange
for a hefty entrance fee.
Need for Daily Structure- A
longer life means more time to fill and, as one speaker noted, “It’s a long
time…you can’t just sit around.” Another stated “you can’t golf and fish every
day.” As I noted in my book, Flipping
a Switch, older adults need to replace working
hours with other activities (e.g., clubs, hobbies, volunteerism) that take up
big chunks of time.
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