• 401k plan
  • living inretirement
  • retirement wealth
  • retirement planning

Retirement Attitude and Satisfaction: Some Influences Factor

retirement factor
Pension and annuity retirement policies were first implemented as a means to encourage older workers in employment to look for another jobs. Retirement has become a norm, the expected life of the stage, which has an institutionalized part of most modern societies. Workers expect to retire actively choose to withdraw from workforce as quickly as they are financially feasible. Once they are retired, they are expected to enjoy their life and get satisfaction with their lives. (more…)

3.11.2011

Social Security Death Benefit: How to Apply & Who is Eligible?

The loss of a member of family might be devastating for family members, both equally psychologically as well as on a financial basis. Social Security is intended to be a survivor program in addition to a retirement program. We are going to discuss one-time lump sum social security death benefit, monthly social security survivor benefits, whom qualifies for survivor benefits, and how you can apply for benefits whenever a family member passes away. (more…)

13.06.2011

Careers after Retirement: Fast Growing Jobs/Occupation for Older Workers

There is a new report that forecasts which industries or sectors that will be the more than likely to make new jobs for older workers and employ older workers. The majority of the job expansion will be within the social sector, including govt/administration, health care, education, and social assistance jobs. Are you searching or planning for different career choices after retirement? Many baby boomers are getting to be bank tellers, security screenwriter, tour guides, home care assistants after they entered their retirement age. We’re certain you will come across job fulfillment and benefits in several of the occupations we are going to recommend for your golden years. (more…)

21.05.2011

Financial Recovery Strategies in Later Life or After Retirement

These strategies can help recover lost income and/or assets following one or more of the life events described above. These strategies can also be used by late savers to make up for lost time and to prepare for a comfortable retirement.

Increase Contributions to Tax-Deferred Retirement Savings Plans. The 2001 tax law increased annual contribution limits for IRAs and employer 401(k), 403(b), and Section 457 plans, at least through 2010. Just a 1% increase in the amount of pay diverted to savings can result in thousands of additional dollars at retirement. Americans contributed an average of $3,514 to 401(k) plans in 2001 (Opdyke and Higgins 2002). The maximum plan contribution limits are $12,000 in 2003, $13,000 in 2004, $14,000 in 2005, $15,000 in 2006, and higher amounts adjusted for inflation thereafter. (more…)

5.05.2011

Financial Security in Retirement: 4 Things for Successful Retirement Planning

Everyone is needed financial security in some current stage of their life. While financial security in retirement is involving more freedom from fear and anxiety about having sufficient financial resources in later life. Whether considered from an individual perspective or from a societal view, the attainment of financial security in retirement may hold challenges. (more…)

24.03.2011

Retirement Income Planning: Social Security, Pension Income Benefit, Investments

Issues around retirement income planning are the most obvious. The traditional “three-legged stool” of retirement income planning—Social Security, pension income benefit, and income from personal savings and investments—is increasingly unsteady. Social Security faces a funding crisis in the first half of the twenty-first century because soon there may not be enough workers paying into the system to support those receiving its benefits. Social Security income lifts more than one in three older persons out of poverty—more than 60% of them women. It is by far the single most important contributor to financial security in old age in America. (more…)

22.03.2011

Life Expectancy and Your Retirement: How to Make Better Planning

Life Expectancy Retirement
When someone is entering retirement, it can be identified as a long sigh of relief from the stress of work routine. It is the time to free someone’s from work and enjoying life. The retirement age is the age at which you are free to work and follow your heart, for the rest of your life! Who gave a thought that life after retirement from the planning of their financial resources, usually early retirement and early retirement benefits? What to do after retire? But not all are so good, old in planning for retirement and has no chance to retire at age 40 or 50 years and live a peaceful life to come! (more…)

26.02.2011

Social Security and Cost of Living Adjustments (COLAs)

Periodic additions to income payments that enable recipients to purchase the same amount and quality of goods and services over time despite inflation. As experienced by older Americans, Cost of Living Adjustments are annual increases to Social Security benefits and other income payments that reflect the previous year’s inflation rate in urban areas. Although a common perception is that older persons dependent on Social Security are protected from losing purchasing power, in actuality, after a few years they often cannot maintain the level of retirement standard of living they had upon retirement and experience increases in their cost of living greater than increases in their retirement income. (more…)

9.02.2011

The Role Of Pensions In Retirement Behavior, Work Satisfaction, Schedule Flexibility, Phased Retirement Options, And Supportive Work Environments

Older workers of today are healthier, better educated, more highly skilled, and a larger proportion of the labor market than in any previous era. Yet, many employers continue to view older workers through a lens distorted by negative stereotypes that developed during the early days of the industrialization process. High rates of unemployment and a sense that human capital, developed in early adulthood, should be sufficient to see workers through their careers made “shedding” older workers a seemingly affordable solution. The long-term costs of that “solution” are now being realized, not only in terms of the pension liabilities that encumber the finances of firms, but also in terms of the organizational loss that occurs when senior workers disappear. (more…)

2.02.2011

The Impact Of Aging Population On The Labor Force

Aging Population
As the nations of the world address the challenges of population aging, two key issues of concern are whether a sufficient number of appropriately skilled workers will be available to maintain economic productivity and whether the existing retirement pension programs will be able to maintain the growing number of retirees. A multidisciplinary literature addresses various dimensions of these joined issues, including studies of the trends in employment rates among persons 55 years and older, the relationship between aging and changes in physical and mental capacity, the influence of current policies on the availability and utilization of older workers, and how new workplace programs and government policies may lead to improved opportunities for jobs for older workers. The policies proposed in response to these concerns differ in their targets for change and in their tone. (more…)

2.02.2011
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