3. Why do women need to start early to save for retirement?Is a bad day fishing better...
Question:
3. Why do women need to start early to save for retirement?Is a bad day fishing better than a good day at the office? Yes, according to a retired dad, Chuck. With his company pension, at least he didn’t have to worry about money. In the good old days, if you had a decent job, you’d hang on to it, and then your company’s pension combined with Social Security payments would be enough to live comfortably. Chuck’s son, Rob, does not have a company pension and is not sure whether Social Security will even exist when he retires. So when it comes to retirement, the sooner you start saving, the better.
Take Maureen, a salesperson for a computer company, and Therese, an accountant for a lighting manufacturer. Both start their jobs at age 25. Maureen starts saving for retirement right away by investing $300 a month at 9 percent until age 65. But Therese does nothing until age 35. At 35, she begins investing the same $300 a month at 9 percent until age 65. What a shocking difference! Maureen has accumulated $1.4 million, while Therese has only $553,000 in her retirement fund. The moral? The sooner you start, the more you’ll have for your retirement. Women especially need to start sooner, because they typically enter the workforce later, have lower salaries, and, ultimately, have lower pensions.
Step by Step Answer:
Focus On Personal Finance
ISBN: 9781259919657
6th Edition
Authors: Jack Kapoor, Les Dlabay, Robert Hughes, Melissa Hart