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|    can.legal    |    Debating Canuck legal system quirks    |    10,932 messages    |
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|    Message 9,154 of 10,932    |
|    abc to All    |
|    A comfortable retirement is no sure thin    |
|    16 Aug 09 08:33:56    |
      XPost: can.general, can.jobs, can.politics       From: abc@123.cl              A comfortable retirement is no sure thing                     August 16, 2009                     Many retirees hope to add to their income by taknig on some part-time       work. William Hanley says the 'jobless' recovery could upset those       plans.              Many retirees hope to add to their income by taknig on some part-time       work. William Hanley says the 'jobless' recovery could upset those       plans.       Photograph by: AFP/Getty Images, AFP/Getty Images              For a close friend of more than 40 years, Christmas is coming Oct. 1.              That’s when, a day before his 65th birthday, he retires after 49 years       of working life, most of it spent in journalism.              “I’m like a kid looking forward to Christmas,” he says. “In fact, this       will be better than Christmas.”              His will be a good retirement, with seven different pensions adding up       nicely to ease the way in what should be his golden years. (He will       have the OAS, CPP, a small British government pension and four modest       defined-benefit pensions from various employers over the years.)              He will do some travelling with his wife, who has already retired,       spending two weeks in the south of France, a place they adore, to start       his retirement with a Gallic flourish. But he will be toweringly       unambitious in retirement, spending much time listening to opera,       reading crime fiction and histories, cooking, having a few beers,       looking after his five cats and looking out the window -- when he has       the time.              And yet, if the right opportunity presented itself, he just might think       about working a day or two a week for some extra spending money. It       would have to be tailored precisely to his needs and wants.              But for many people of my friend’s vintage and a bit younger, Baby       Boomers who have been blindsided by the Great Recession, coming out of       retirement or working deeper into tarnished golden years are not       options, but necessities.              The problem is that the Great Recession has pushed unemployment to       decades-high levels, so jobs are simply not there for the taking, as my       friend will no doubt discover if he some day summons up the energy to       go looking.              A U.S. study published last week by financial retirement firm Longevity       Alliance shows that almost half of American retirees have thought about       getting a job, but now is simply not the right time. Though       circumstances are somewhat different in the United States for retirees,       we can roughly conclude that the numbers and sentiment in Canada will       be similar.              Among other things, the study found that:              * Among retirees, 43% “seriously considered the possibility of some day       going back to work” when they first retired.              * Only 16% of retirees say they are currently considering leaving       retirement.              * “Changes in personal finance” is a major consideration that would       force a retiree to think about going back to work, with 42% of retirees       citing it as a factor.              Though some economists and authorities have declared the recession over       (prematurely, in my view) the recovery, when it comes, is likely to be       of the “jobless” variety in the United States, Canada and much of the       rest of the world.              It is reckoned that 15 million U.S. jobs will have to be created to get       the country back to employment levels that match those before the       recession and also to make up for the subsequent rise in population.       For Canada, the number is likely to be more than one million jobs.              As a result, my friend, if he chooses, and millions of other retirees       should not expect to have jobs thrust at them any time soon, even if       they are skilled and reliable workers.              The answer, then, to finding a comfort level in retirement for many       people is saving solidly for retirement and probably cutting back on       some things in retirement.              As Longevity Alliance notes: “Retirees are very cautious right now, but       not panicked. Their reluctance to rejoin the workforce only underscores       the need for them to plan very carefully for the rest of their       retirement.”              Amen to that. As I’ve noted over the past few years, another thing       retirees can do is reinforce the themes of saving and planning to their       children and grandchildren. If they work hard and save hard, but not to       the exclusion of enjoying life, they will more likely be able to enjoy       a good, long life.              They will almost certainly not have seven different pension sources       like my friend, who also has a decent-sized RRSP that was not invested       in stocks at the time of the crash. But they can work toward making       their personal savings and investments add up to their own defined-       benefit plans.              So they, like my friend, will be able to look forward to their own       personal Christmases, to retirements that may include work, but not the       necessity of work.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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