Faceoff: Saving for retirement

By Deanne Gage | November 30, 2009 | Last updated on November 30, 2009
5 min read

Welcome to Faceoff, featuring a discussion from two advisors on a hot-button topic. This month, here’s some perspective on what clients need to save for retirement.

Moderated by Deanne Gage

Participants:

  • Mary Chan: Principal, Edward Jones, Mississauga, Ont.
  • Janet Freedman: President, Finance Matters, Toronto.

How much is enough?

Mary: At Edward Jones, we look at what is suitable, which includes factoring a number of different components such as known income sources: government sources, personal retirement plans and defined pension plans from work, as well as known expenses. Additionally, variable income and expenses are included. But we are of a general recommendation that clients would need 70% to 90% of their pre-retirement income but obviously that will vary according to health, when you retire, what you plan to do when you retire and what your current base is before retirement.

Janet: I think the percentage is very much dependent on how high the person’s income is before retirement, how much debt they have prior to retirement, whether or not they have children—because children consume a lot of their after-tax income—and what modifications to lifestyle are they expecting to make. A number like 70% is put out by fund companies, banks and financial institutions that have a vested interest in people saving more. There’s a real problem when the bar is set so high that 80% of the population are going to say that’s going to be absolutely impossible.

Mary: : I don’t want to eliminate the thought of 70% because it could be the right sum for a large number of people.

Janet: But I think we need to encourage people to be proactive in figuring it out because it isn’t rocket science. It’s basic addition that they learned in grade two. It’s not a cookie cutter approach. Maybe this is a great opportunity for planners to get out there and say to clients that they need to have a detailed plan done. But you can’t just sit back and just say you need 70% of my income when I retire.

Mary: : We suggest 70% as a starting point for the dialogue. It may be a little bit of a cold shower, however, it gets the conversation going and if that conversation moves along, we’ve helped investors arrive at a better place so they have more options when they retire versus having no options or having decisions taken away from them.

Janet: In what way having decisions taking away from them?

Mary: : For example, having to simply settle upon government resources in retirement versus having some personal resources to draw down from or being reliant on legacies that others might need to leave behind for them so they could have a reasonable roof over their head. Most people don’t like those type of options. I don’t believe in painting a doomsday scenario but I think having a frank conversation will help people make some of those tradeoff decisions early and on a day-by-day basis so they’re in the driver’s seat in the future.

Janet: I agree that we need to see what clients are actually spending now. People really have no idea how much they are spending and yes, there is going to be a lifestyle change. We need to get people to be realistic about what they are going to have and that tradeoff between enjoying life now and having the ability to do more in retirement. Some people seem to want to retire at 55. Well, if you retire at 55, you have to have a lot more money than if you retire at 65 or 70.

Mary: : The tradeoff conversation is the hard conversation, isn’t it? They think the decision is really between ‘Do I buy a coffee at Tim Horton’s or Starbucks?’ when the question is really, ‘Could you have made that coffee at home?’ The sum of all such choices allows for that flexibility in the future. Things are not just going to magically occur or appear for them the minute they decide they are going to retire and start drawing down their Canada Pension Plan. I’m not sure if folks really recognize that their CPP pension income is an earnings-related dollar amount, for example.

Retiring with less

Janet: I’ve seen people with 75% of their incomes going out in debt repayments and they are not low income. They make $400,000 plus gross income but they have public sector pensions. At retirement, they really don’t need to save anything as long as the debt is paid off, they are going to have plenty of income to live on and they will be close. Some other people choose to work in retirement.

What I’m concerned about are people waiting for their inheritance. In a lot of cases, they expected to inherit this money in their 50s and here they are well into their 60s and their parents are in their late 80s. There is a tendency to think there’s going to be this trillion dollar transfer and I really don’t think it’s going to be there. A lot of it is going to be spent, a lot of it is going to cover healthcare and a lot of it will end up in the hands of the grandchildren, not the children.

Mary: : In retirement, they may not have a mortgage but that expense could easily be replaced by items such as retirement home costs or nursing home costs. I can recall one of my older clients, he was 95 and his wife had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. The doctor recommended they move to a nursing home. Well, he certainly did not factor in the cost of that, not to mention the recommendation for him and his wife to be in two separate rooms at the same facility. So the lifestyle is absolutely critical—not only the lifestyle today but also the lifestyle that you may not be prepared for such as ill health. We also need to impress upon clients that they can control their own destiny.

Janet: There’s a lot to be said for that. We also need to work from an approach that if you save y dollars, you can generate x dollars in retirement in today’s dollars and can you live on that? Everyone wants a 30-second sound-bite that says this is how much you need to retire and it’s not that easy. You have to figure out when you want to retire, how long did your parents live, what is your life expectancy and how much debt do you have. All those issues really come into play. It isn’t one size fits all.

Previous Faceoffs

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    Deanne Gage