Retirement Reboot: Commonsense Financial Strategies for Getting Back on TrackPaperback (2024)

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  • Description
  • Product Details
  • About the Author
  • Read an Excerpt
  • What People are Saying
  • Table of Contents

Description

For millions of Americans, the COVID shock has brought retirement saving to an abrupt halt--now it's time to get back on track.

Even before the pandemic, a large share of households by Americans over age 50 faced the threat that their living standards would decline sharply in retirement. In the wake of COVID-19, these numbers will surely worsen. In Retirement Reboot: Commonsense Financial Strategies for Getting Back on Track, finance writer and regular New York Times retirement contributor Mark Miller offers practical strategies for Americans to improve their retirement prospects.

If you're nearing retirement age and worry you haven't saved enough, Retirement Reboot will walk you through the core decisions to make now to improve your retirement outcomes--even if retirement is just a few years away. You'll learn how to make a plan, think through the timing of retirement, optimize Social Security, navigate Medicare, build savings, and tap home equity. You'll also explore ongoing strategies, such as careful budgeting, generating income from work even after retirement, planning for long-term care, and leveraging special assistance aimed at low-income workers. If you have low savings, or none at all, Miller's simple steps can help you make the most of your remaining working years and reboot the retirement you always imagined.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781572843196

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: Agate

Publication Date: 01-10-2023

Pages: 280

Product Dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Mark Miller is a journalist, author, and podcaster with a national reputation as a top expert on retirement and aging—and he is at a point in life when he personally is asking himself many of the same questions facing millions of other older Americans. He contributes regularly to the New York Times “Retiring” column, which appears in the Sunday edition, where they are among the best-read personal finance stories in the paper. He also writes monthly national columns on retirement for Reuters, Morningstar, and Wealth Management magazine. Mark’s website, RetirementRevised.com, publishes a newsletter and podcast that features interviews with authoritative experts in the field of retirement. His previous books include Jolt: Stories of Trauma and Transformation and The Hard Times Guide to Retirement Security. He is the father of three young adult children who still periodically seek out advice from him or his wife of forty years, Anita Weinberg.

Read an Excerpt

Read an Excerpt

If you are getting close to retirement, the odds are pretty good that you’re not prepared.

I don’t mean getting prepared emotionally—although retirement is a significant life transition that can shake people up. I’m talking about the financial side of retirement. And the statistics tell us that two-thirds or more of Americans nearing retirement age simply are not ready.

The most important measure of financial readiness to retire is your ability to replace working income after you retire—in other words, your ability to maintain your standard of living. This readiness is directly related, of course, to the financial history of your working years: career earnings, time spent out of the workforce, and financial emergencies that flare up along the way. Competing demands for each available dollar, such as the high cost of housing, child care, and college tuition, also matter a great deal to your level of preparation for retirement. An unexpected crisis or life upheaval like a health emergency, divorce, or disability that prevents you from working, can throw your plans off track.

Americans approaching retirement now have surfed some especially scary economic waves. If you were 55 years old in 2021, you’ve experienced four recessions that might have left you unemployed for extended periods of time. Two of them were especially devastating for older workers: the Great Recession of 2009–10 and the pandemic-induced recession that began in 2020. Both of these downturns produced higher rates of job loss—and longer periods of joblessness—for older workers than for younger ones. Millions of homeowners lost their homes or found themselves deep underwater in the housing crash accompanying the Great Recession. We tend to have short memories in this country, but these economic calamities had long-lasting effects that were very difficult—if not impossible—to recover from.

Even a short-term interruption in wages can have a surprisingly large impact on retirement. Each year out of the workforce translates into losses considerably larger than the immediate amount of missing salary. These losses compound over the arc of a career—lost wage growth and retirement savings, and credits toward Social Security and pension benefits.

If you’ve been saving and investing for retirement—and that’s a big if—you have lived through eight stock market crashes or bear markets—nine if you’re a few years older and experienced the Black Monday crash of 1987.

You struggled with competing demands for dollars that might have been saved. For example, over the past two decades, average annual tuition and fees at private universities jumped 144 percent; in-state costs at public schools soared 212 percent. Nearly 10 million retirement-age households spend more than 30 percent of their income on housing, meaning that they fall into the category researchers call “cost burdened.” The share of older households carrying debt has soared over the past two decades, and bankruptcy rates are rising.

Roughly one-fourth of adults say they or a household member have had problems paying medical bills, and about half have put off or skipped health care or dental care in a typical year.

Perhaps you needed to quit your job to provide care for someone you love. One out of every five Americans are caregivers for an adult or child with special needs.

Meanwhile, wages have been growing slowly for most workers over the past four decades—and nearly all the wage growth that did occur was concentrated among the highest-income households. In fact, if we had not experienced wage growth during periods of very low unemployment in the late 1990s and just before the pandemic, real wages would be lower today than they were 40 years ago.

Many Americans are living with no financial reserves whatsoever—nearly 40 percent of adults say they could not cover a $400 emergency with cash, savings, or a credit card charge.

The COVID-19 pandemic has stretched the financial rubber band even tighter for millions—in many cases, past the breaking point.

The percentage of these at-risk households already was very high pre-pandemic across income groups, and it has jumped substantially since the coronavirus struck. Risk is highest for low-income households—but nearly as high for middle earners.

People of color face substantially higher risks—the result of our history of racism in the labor market evident in everything from hiring to pay, promotions, and benefits. These inequities have kept incomes much lower than for White counterparts. And numerous policies have served as barriers to wealth accumulation by Black people. These include the Jim Crow–era Black Codes, which restricted opportunity in many Southern states; racially restrictive covenants barred them from buying homes in White neighborhoods; and redlining practices that made mortgages hard or impossible to obtain. The inequities have compounded over time, as families were unable to transfer wealth to subsequent generations.

A majority of single Black and Latino retirees don’t have sufficient incomes to meet the basic cost of living. And women also face special risks. They tend to earn less than men, and they are more likely to take time off from work to care for children or elderly parents. Even brief career interruptions diminish wage growth, retirement savings, and Social Security benefits, which are determined by wage history. Women also tend to outlive men, needing to stretch resources over more years. In particular, they face higher health care expenses in retirement.

Taken together, we can see that many older Americans will have trouble maintaining their standard of living in retirement. One of the best measures of this risk is the Elder Index, produced by the Gerontology Institute at the Universityof Massachusetts Boston. It measures the cost of living for older people living as couples or alone—but independent of children. It is built around the typical budgets of seniors, and it shows that roughly half of Americans over age 65 living alone have incomes that are below the index. In other words, they lack the resources to pay for their basic living needs. For couples, who usually benefit from two Social Security checks and are more likely to have other income. the comparable figure is 23 percent. But the figures are far worse for people of color, and for women living alone, as the following chart shows.

Rates of Economic Insecurity by Racial Identity and Household Status, 65 Years or Older

Latino or Hispanic

Couples

49%

Men living alone

65%

Women living alone

76%

Asian, non-Hispanic

Couples

37%

Men living alone

52%

Women living alone

62%

Black, non-Hispanic

Couples

34%

Men living alone

60%

Women living alone

67%

White, non-Hispanic

Couples

22%

Men living alone

41%

Women living alone

51%

Source: Data from Jan Mutchler, Nidya Velasco Roldán, and Yang Li. “Late-Life Gender Disparities in Economic Security in the Context of Geography, Race and Ethnicity, and Age: Evidence from the 2020 Elder Index.” Universityof Massachusetts Boston Center for Social and Demographic Research on Aging Publications. June 2021.

If you’re not ready for retirement for any of the reasons I’ve described—and probably it’s more than one—this book is for you. Not because I have some magic formula to offer—I don’t. What I do have to offer is a short list of practical strategies that can improve your financial security in retirement. They are not necessarily easy, but they are achievable, sensible steps—and you still have time to take them.

These are the strategies that I’ve distilled from 15 years working as a journalist covering the retirement and aging beat. One of the best things about being a journalist is access. You can sit down with experts and get them to explain things to you and to teach you things. And, as a student of retirement, I have taken full advantage, interviewing many of the top experts in the field here in the United States and around the world. I estimate that I’ve produced nearly 1,000 articles and podcasts about retirement and conducted well over 3,300 interviews. I’ve read hundreds of research papers on everything from Social Security, Medicare, and other types of health insurance to late-career work, investing and saving, workplace retirement plans, pensions, taxes, financial planning, housing, careers, long-term care, and caregiving.

And here’s the most important thing I’ve learned: Complexity is the enemy of everyday working Americans trying to build toward a financially secure retirement.

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What People are Saying

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Mark Miller is just about the smartest writer on the subject of retirement I know, and Retirement Reboot does not disappoint. . . . Miller’s knowledgeable guidance will offer both reassurance and an action plan. Buy this book!” —Helaine Olen, columnist, the Washington Post

“While growing old can be daunting to contemplate, Retirement Reboot shines a light on the many advantages to this period of increased leisure and time, and reveals how to ensure that this important stage of life is accompanied by security and independence.” —Nancy J. Altman, president, Social Security Works and chair of the Strengthen Social Security Coalition

“Mark Miller looked at the shaky retirement landscape facing millions of near-retirees and has delivered a proactive book that addresses fundamental financial and work issues straight on.” —Kerry Hannon, workplace futurist, Yahoo Finance senior columnist and author of In Control at 50+: How to Succeed in the New World of Work

“No one tackles the topic of retirement planning with as much attention to detail as Mark Miller. But the best part of this terribly useful book is that it's written with real people in mind—their aspirations, their worries, their social connections.” —Christine Benz, director of personal finance, Morningstar

“Mark Miller has given us a magnificent guide to making a monument out of what used to be the leftover years. Beautifully written, filled with wise counsel and compelling stories, Retirement Reboot explains how each of us can not only navigate the financial challenges of longer lives, but find the path to joy and purpose in our 50s, 60s, 70s, and beyond. I’ll be recommending this book to everyone I know, young and old alike.”—Marc Freedman, founder, Encore.org, and author, How to Live Forever: The Enduring Power of Connecting the Generations

“Miller’s nine retirement-planning strategies are smart, practical, and clearly explained. This is a must-read for anyone looking to achieve financial security in retirement.”—Richard Eisenberg, MarketWatch’s “The View From Unretirement” columnist

“Let's say you hit a few potholes on the road to retirement: You haven't saved enough, don’t have a clue about Social Security, and desperately need to get back on track. Mark Miller not only provides a wealth of information on how to reboot your retirement, he will get you back in the driver’s seat in style. This is a must-read for anyone in this situation!” —John F. Wasik, author of Lincolnomics

“Miller’s book is a thinking person’s guide to retirement planning and a reassuring tonic for those who can’t think straight about retirement because it is so scary.” —Teresa Ghilarducci, Department of Economics, The New School

“Finally, an instruction manual for how to approach the last third of life! Mark deftly tackles the nuts and bolts of income planning and health care in retirement. Added bonuses include the thoughtful discussions on continuing work, planning for the logistics of aging, and the bigger picture of how we need to approach the finances of aging from a societal level. This is a must-read for anyone contemplating retirement.” —Carolyn McClanahan

“An invaluable roadmap to successful aging in uncertain times.” —Philip Moeller, author, Get What’s Yours for Medicare

Retirement Reboot is the perfect fiftiethbirthday present for anyone seeking retirement security.Mark Miller proves that smart decisions can make a big difference in your retirement lifestyle—and he guides you every step of the way.” —Terry Savage, nationally syndicated personal finance columnist and author of The Savage Truth on Money

Retirement Reboot will help reduce the anxiety you may feel about your own retirement plan. Retirement is a life transition and Mark’s book is right on time for millions of people who want to get a clear understanding of how to attain financial security leading up to and throughout retirement. The book does an outstanding job of breaking down how to navigate what’s become a very complex financial and retirement system. Late-starters who may not have saved enough early in their careers really can catch up. Mark is offering simple, straightforward, actionable advice that’s truly grounded in common sense.Planning for retirement doesn’t have to be a nail-biting experience when you understand how to approach finding the right answers. Anyone—and that includes financial experts—will benefit from reading Retirement Reboot.”—Pam Krueger, founder, CEO Wealthramp and co-host, Friends Talk Money

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Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Foreword 1

By Chris Farrell, Senior Economics Contributor, Marketplace and Minnesota Public Radio

Introduction 7

Chapter 1 Making a Plan 19

If you don't have a financial plan for retirement, it's impossible to know where you stand.

Chapter 2 Timing Your Retirement 29

Timing is everything-and retirement is no exception.

Chapter 3 Optimizing Social Security 39

Social Security will be your most important source of retirement income, so it's important to understand how this benefit works, and how to get the most from it.

Chapter 4 Navigating Medicare 61

Health care is one of the most significant expenses in retirement, and making smart choices about your Medicare enrollment can help you manage these costs.

Chapter 5 Building Savings 91

If you're getting close to retirement and haven't saved much, it is still possible to build significant savings late in the game.

Chapter 6 Tapping Home Equity 113

If your retirement plan is coming up short, consider tapping what might be your most important asset: your home.

Chapter 7 Managing Your Career to the Finish Line 125

How to stay gainfully employed as long as you want to-or need to-before transitioning into retirement.

Chapter 8 Aging in Place 135

Most Americans hope to age right where they are. But it's important to evaluate your living situation for age-friendliness-whether that is your current borne and community or somewhere else.

Chapter 9 Managing Long-Term Care Risk 143

Contemplating a time when you might not be able to take care of your own daily living needs is difficult-but necessary.

Chapter 10 The Value of Advice 161

Financial planning help once was the province of the wealthy, but over the past couple decades, it has become more accessible to average folks-and it has become far more professional and holistic in approach.

Chapter 11 Taxes in Retirement 173

Your tax burden will likely he lighter in retirement, but you may be able to smooth out or minimize the burden.

Chapter 12 Managing Your Pension 181

Traditional pensions are waning in the private sector, but if you're lucky enough to have one coming, it's important to manage it well and make smart decisions.

Chapter 13 Becoming an Entrepreneur After 50 199

The word may sound intimidating, but entrepreneurship later in your career can be a great way to keep working.

Chapter 14 Finding Your Purpose in Retirement 209

Whether you work as a volunteer or part-time for pay, using some of your time in retirement this way pays big dividends for your own health and mental well-being.

Chapter 15 Toward a New Social Insurance Era 221

There is good reason to worry about the American retirement system as it is today, but we can improve it by strengthening and expanding our two most critical social insurance programs for retirement: Social Security and Medicare.

Acknowledgments 253

Notes 257

Index 266

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Retirement Reboot: Commonsense Financial Strategies for Getting Back on TrackPaperback (2024)

FAQs

How can you avoid running out of money during your retirement years? ›

To avoid this, it's crucial to establish a sustainable withdrawal rate. We recommend doing this with the help of a professional, who can use cashflow modelling for greater accuracy. It's also important to review your forecast at least once a year to ensure you have plenty left.

How can I be financially stable for retirement? ›

Saving Matters!
  1. Start saving, keep saving, and stick to.
  2. Know your retirement needs. ...
  3. Contribute to your employer's retirement.
  4. Learn about your employer's pension plan. ...
  5. Consider basic investment principles. ...
  6. Don't touch your retirement savings. ...
  7. Ask your employer to start a plan. ...
  8. Put money into an Individual Retirement.

How do you play catch up on retirement savings? ›

10 Best Ways to Catch Up on Retirement Savings
  1. Take Advantage of Catch-Up Contributions. ...
  2. Delay Collecting Social Security. ...
  3. Utilize Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) for Retirement. ...
  4. Set Goals and Expectations. ...
  5. Create a Practical Budget. ...
  6. Start a Side Hustle. ...
  7. Seek Professional Advice.
May 20, 2024

Do most retirees run out of money? ›

The average retiree doesn't have anywhere close to $1 million saved. Most retirees have just $142,500 in savings, according to Clever's study. Almost half (46%) of retirees are unprepared for the possibility of running out of retirement savings.

What is the 4 rule for retirement withdrawals? ›

The 4% rule says people should withdraw 4% of their retirement funds in the first year after retiring and take that dollar amount, adjusted for inflation, every year after. The rule seeks to establish a steady and safe income stream that will meet a retiree's current and future financial needs.

What is the $1000 a month rule for retirement? ›

According to the $1,000 per month rule, retirees can receive $1,000 per month if they withdraw 5% annually for every $240,000 they have set aside. For example, if you aim to take out $2,000 per month, you'll need to set aside $480,000. For $3,000 per month, you would need to save $720,000, and so on.

What is a good monthly retirement income? ›

Average Monthly Retirement Income

According to data from the BLS, average 2022 incomes after taxes were as follows for older households: 65-74 years: $63,187 per year or $5,266 per month. 75 and older: $47,928 per year or $3,994 per month.

What is the 70% rule for retirement? ›

One rule of thumb is that you'll need 70% of your pre-retirement yearly salary to live comfortably. That might be enough if you've paid off your mortgage and are in excellent health when you kiss the office good-bye.

How do I get back on track with retirement? ›

How a financial advisor can help you get on track for retirement.
  1. Adjust your retirement date. ...
  2. Prioritize your 401(k) contributions**. ...
  3. Minimize your expenses. ...
  4. Pay yourself first. ...
  5. Time debt payoffs to align with retirement. ...
  6. Consider lifestyle adjustments. ...
  7. Explore new career opportunities.

What is the 3 rule in retirement? ›

A 3 percent withdrawal rate works better with larger portfolios. For instance, using the above numbers, a 3 percent rule would mean withdrawing just $22,500 per year. In this case, you may need additional income, such as Social Security, to supplement your retirement.

What is the golden rule of retirement savings? ›

Retirement may seem like a distant dream, but it's never too early or too late to start planning. The “golden rule” suggests saving at least 15% of your pre-tax income, but with each individual's financial situation being unique, how can you be sure you're on the right track?

Is it possible to lose your retirement money? ›

If your employer goes bankrupt, you probably won't lose your retirement money, but it's possible. Most 401(k) plans go into trusts that are kept separate from your employer's operating funds, and that money should not be available to the employer's creditors.

How do I stop running out of money? ›

Creating a tailored budget helps control finances and prevent overspending. Essential bills should be prioritized, and unnecessary spending should be cut. Exploring additional income sources and government benefits can provide financial relief.

How do you make your money last in retirement? ›

We did the math—looking at history and simulating many potential outcomes—and landed on this: For a high degree of confidence that you can cover a consistent amount of expenses in retirement (i.e., it should work 90% of the time), aim to withdraw no more than 4% to 5% of your savings in the first year of retirement, ...

How many years should retirement money last? ›

This rule is based on research finding that if you invested at least 50% of your money in stocks and the rest in bonds, you'd have a strong likelihood of being able to withdraw an inflation-adjusted 4% of your nest egg every year for 30 years (and possibly longer, depending on your investment return over that time).

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