Sunday, July 5, 2009

Money & Business

Planning to Retire by Emily Brandon

Are Your Retirement Savings on Target?

July 01, 2008 03:12 PM ET | Emily Brandon | Permanent Link | Print

Employees aren't sure how much of their salary they should replace in retirement. As part of an online test on retirement income, MetLife Mature Market Institute and GfK North America asked, "What percent of preretirement income do experts think retirees need to use as a benchmark for determining the amount of annual income needed in retirement?" The chart below shows the responses of workers between the ages of 56 and 65 who plan to retire in the next five years.

They're right to be confused. There is no correct income replacement rate for everyone. An adequate level of income depends on retirement expenditures, retirement age, gender, asset allocation, and the percentage of savings that is annuitized, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute.

Some economists doubt altogether the validity of the replacement rate calculations that many online calculators provide, saying that they often ignore variables that are impossible to predict, such as longevity, investment returns, and catastrophic healthcare costs that can derail all but the most sound retirement plans.

Human resources consulting firm Hewitt Associates released a report today saying that employees will need to replace, on average, an astonishing 126 percent of their final pay in retirement after inflation and medical costs are factored in. Most workers are on target to replace 85 percent of their income based on Hewitt's analysis of nearly 2 million employees at 72 large U.S. companies.

Nonetheless, a Government Accountability Office report found that some economists and financial advisers consider retirement income adequate if it replaces 65 to 85 percent of preretirement income. But you don't have to completely get to that number on your own. Social Security replaces, on average, 54.2 percent of wages for low-earning workers and 33.5 percent of income for high earners. To get to, say, a 75 percent replacement rate, you'd have to make up the difference of only 20.8 and 41.5 percent of income, respectively. And if you're lucky enough to have a pension, you can probably get by with saving even less.

Some studies have found that simply doing a calculation of your retirement-savings needs can put you on the fast track. But the GAO has much more dire predictions. Workers born in 1990 will have enough savings in their 401(k)-style plans to replace only about one fifth ($18,784 annually in 2007 dollars when savings are converted to a lifetime annuity) of their annual preretirement income, GAO projects. And 37 percent of workers born in 1990 will have no 401(k)-style savings at all.

That's better than the current crop of older workers but still not enough. Workers between 55 and 64 who have a 401(k)-style plan had a median account balance of $50,000 in 2004, which would provide an income of about $4,400 per year, replacing just 9 percent of income, on average, the GAO calculated.

Tell us, do you have a percentage of your preretirement income you're aiming to replace? Or do you just save as much as you can?

Tags: investing | retirement | savings

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Reader Comments

Retirement at 64

I have 430.000 in IRA and 200,000 in C.D.I have 1 year to be 64 and should save 25,000 more. I own my home and have no other payments.I make 70,000 a year and save half what I clear.I bargin shop and mostley buy my food on sale I do think I could live on 30,000 clear a year.But I am very afraid to retire. I would love to let my three sons something to help them in thier retirement.WHAT CAN I DO AND WHEN?

John...can you live on 52K?

People say that if you can live on 4% of what you have in savings...you can retire. Granted- just as this article states- facts and figures vary. If you can live on 52,000 which is 4% of 1.3 million then yes, you can retire per most $$$ gurus opinions.

Can you and your wife live on 52K a year? Only you can answer that.

regional adjustments

Does any "canned" calulation ever compensate for regional cost differences ? For example; the upper midwest costs vs NY or California costs...

what % alerations might be in play ?

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Reporter Emily Brandon tells you how to get ready financially for retirement and to make your golden years the best they can be. You can E-mail Emily your retirement concerns at retire@usnews.com.

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