How to Save for Retirement While Still Enjoying Today
- By Tracy Piercy
- Investing
- Unrated
Tracy Piercy
Tracy Piercy, a Certified Financial Planner in the Uunited States, offers step by step proven success principles, tools, ideas and strategies integrated with practical financial planning strategies. She has worked in the financial industry, in insurance, banking, and as a well respected investment advisor with CIBC Wood Gundy, for more than 15 years. Tracy is the author of Enlightened Wealth, a personal money journal. To learn more about her step by step system visit http://www.moneyminding.com
View all articles by Tracy PiercyHow to Save for Retirement While Still Enjoying Today
First, understand that you can’t save for retirement. Retirement is not something like the purchase of a new car, or holiday that has a fixed price and can be purchased at when you have the money.
In order to retire from the workforce you need to have enough financial resources that you can support yourself in the lifestyle you desire.
This will require you to be financially independent – not that you have a fixed amount of money stashed away in some investment account somewhere.
Second, you must understand that you don’t have two different lives – the working life and then the retirement life.
You have one life and the money you need to support your lifestyle in that one life is not something you can save for.
Yes, one thing you can and should do is to have some money invested for long term support of your lifestyle.
But, the only way to do this is to start with every dollar you earn and simply designate a percentage for long term savings.
Third, long term savings can include the retiring of debts which have accumulated because you have already spent your future earnings.
If you have enjoyed a lifestyle benefit from the advancement of credit today, then you are simply doing things in reverse.
If you are being charged say 18% on your credit card and are paying that amount with after tax dollars, the best investment you can make is to pay that bill.
Fourth, the only way you can know how much money you need to have coming in each month so you can be financially independent is to first know how much is going out.
This amount needs to be an exact amount – not a guess.
That means that for a period of time you must do some research by tracking your expenses – all of them.
Fifth, when you know what money is going out, you can evaluate where to allocate funds most effectively.
You can work with a professional to compare alternatives for paying off debt if necessary and to consider options for combining financial programs.
Some examples, of this type of financial strategizing are reorganizing debt, combining mortgage payments with investments, investing within insurance, or leveraging exiting assets.
Whether any of these strategies makes sense for you personally, isn’t something that can be answered until you have the other items in order first.
Then you will know what you need, where exactly you stand today and can explore alternatives to bridge the gap that enable you to develop long term financial independence while still enjoying your life today – because it’s all one life.
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