MAY 2015
“Life is an
adventure in forgiveness.”
- Norman Cousins
HEALTH TIP See to your
eyes
While most of us go in for annual physicals and twice-yearly dental
checkups, a visit to the eye doctor every 12 months may not seem as high a
priority, but it is important and essential. Have your eyes checked for glaucoma
and other age-related problems once a year.
BRAIN TEASER Cog
Query. A machine has four
cogs in constant mesh. The largest cog has 72 teeth and the others have 36, 25 and
15 respectively. How many revolutions must the largest cog make before each of the
cogs is back in its starting position?*
DID YOU KNOW?
Cold comfort in big buildings
A little-known secret: if you work in a large commercial or industrial
building, adjusting the thermostat in your office will probably have no effect
on the temperature. Most HVAC systems in office and warehouse buildings are
regulated by a computer responding to sensors. The small wall-mounted thermostat
boxes are often just “dummy controls” included by the HVAC contractor to provide
a placebo effect for employees.5
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WILL YOU SPEND LESS IN RETIREMENT...OR MORE THAN YOU
THINK?
Does retirement mean
reduced monthly expenses? For many households, the answer is “yes” – at least in
the short term. The long term is another story.
A Morningstar study of
federal government data finds that most Americans spend less starting in their
sixties, whether they retire or not. Last year, T. Rowe Price surveyed recent
retirees (median net worth: $473,000) and discovered that the average couple was
living on 66% of its pre-retirement household income – though as a
Money
article notes, the differential between pre- and post-retirement
household spending is generally less for wealthier households than it is for
middle class households. In Barron’s, Rand economist Michael Hurd estimated that "spending will decline 16% to
25%” within ten years of retirement for most households, partly due to divorce
or the death of a spouse.
The Morningstar research,
however, asserts that retirees gradually spend less from their early sixties
into their late seventies, but then spend more starting in their early eighties
as they contend with larger healthcare costs. So while your expenses may decline
in the early phase of retirement, they could increase markedly in the later
phase. This is all the more reason to plan to retire on 75% or more of your
final salary, and to consider your options to fund long term
care.1,2
MOST RETIREES ARE STAYING PUT
Decades ago, a move to the
Sunbelt was part of the American retirement dream. You left the cold, you played
golf or tennis, and you wore shorts in February. Today, that Sunbelt move is
increasingly rare. As some recently released Census Bureau data shows,
retirement and relocation have gotten less
synonymous.
During 2009-13, just 1% of
Americans age 65 or older moved to another state. In fact, only 5.7% of them
moved into a new home. Most of those who did move ended up living in the same
state, with a significant percentage of them choosing to live in the same
county. All this suggests that retirees value support systems more than changes
of scenery; warmer winters aside, nothing beats having friends and family close
by.3
ON THE BRIGHT SIDE
In the Employee Benefit Research Institute’s
2015 Retirement Confidence Survey, 28% of those participating in employer-sponsored
retirement plans indicated they felt “very confident” about their prospects for
retirement, double the percentage recorded in 2013.4
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