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Div 296 sparking death benefit discussions
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Roles and Responsibilities in a Business Partnership
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Leasing property owned by an SMSF
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Evolution of Boeing - 1916 - 2025
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Your 30 June superannuation checklist
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Comparison of various Animal Weight
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Why more Australian SMSF owners are looking to global equities
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Trustees reminded of minimum pension drawdown
How boosting your super can help you reduce your tax bill
Are your adult children ready for the wealth transfer?
Financial abuse move now a certainty
Freshwater Resources by Country 2025
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Advisers should be aware of signs of elder abuse in SMSF structures
SMSFs hold record levels of cash and property
Trustees warned on early access
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Articles
Securely transfer your personal and business information to your Financial Planner.
Coping with instant wealth
Some industry terminology
Home alone
Market Update - 29th February 2012
Little savings, big rewards
Love and money ........
Market Wrap - 21-2-12
Lessons from a rocky road
Quarterly Market Report to 31-12-2011
Securely transfer your personal information over the Internet
Retirees make a comeback
Some Terminology
Retirement evolution
Identifying Market Trends
Market and Economic Update - December 2011
Retirement evolution
.At what age do you intend to retire - if at all? Do you aim to wind-down slowly to retirement by working fewer hours or by taking a part-time job? And how do you plan to finance your retirement? These are among the crucial questions facing the wave of baby boomers who are inexorably moving nearer and nearer to what has - at least in the past - been considered a typical retirement age.


It seems that many Australians are warming to the idea of retiring at an older
age than in the past. And many are easing their way into retirement by
progressively reducing their workload.

The concept of abruptly finishing 40 years or so of full-time work on a Friday
and entering a quarter century or so of retirement from the following Monday
may be fast losing its appeal.

Further, a relatively high proportion of the workforce in their forties and
above expect their superannuation savings to play a big role in financing their
retirement lifestyles.

The findings of the latest Retirement and Retirement Intentions report, recently published by Australian Bureau of Statistics, reflect this changing
attitude to retirement. 

The report found that:


  • More than 40 per cent of the full-time workforce      aged 45-plus intend to switch to part-time work before completely
    retiring.
  • Forty seven per cent of the workforce aged      45-plus plan to retire between ages 65 and 69. And
         28 to 37 per cent intend to retire between 60 and 64, while 14 per
    cent intend to remain at their desks (or whatever) until at least 70.
  • Just over half of those aged more than 45 (and      who intend to retire one day) expect superannuation to provide their main
         source of income. And 27 per cent believe that the age pension and other government
    allowances will be their main retirement income.

Consider how these expectations compare with what is actually happening right now.

The average age at retirement of those who retired in the past five years was
61. According to the survey for the ABS report, the biggest source of
retirement income is the age pension and other government allowances (53 per
cent of current retirees) followed by superannuation (27 per cent.)
Interestingly, 44 per cent of women named their partners' income as their main
income.

Many factors are probably at play here. Certainly, reliance on super savings
will inevitably rise as the compulsory contribution system matures. However,
many retirees are at risk of being overly optimistic about how far their super
will really stretch in retirement.

And by the way, 13 per cent of the workforce aged over 45 does not want to ever
retire - a sentiment that must have been reinforced by the latest bout of high
volatility in the market.

Perhaps a key point is to plan carefully for retirement and to be realistic
about how much money you will need to finance your desired standard of living
in retirement.


 


By Robin Bowerman
Smart Investing
Principal & Head of Retail, Vanguard Investments Australia
21st December 2011



19th-January-2012