The Benefit of Reducing Living
Expenses Vs Accumulating More
Savings
by
Shane Flait ©2010
When you reach retirement, you’re
concern is having sufficient income
to last you indefinitely. Typical
sources of income are your Social
Security income, pension income, and
the income you can withdraw from
your invested savings. But if these
sources are low for in your case,
this article shows that budgeting to
reduce your retirement living
expenses can significantly relieve
your reliance on retirement income.
If you’re within a few years of
retirement, your pension and social
security income are pretty much
determined since they depend on your
overall career income path and
there’s little left of that.
Increasing retirement income beyond
these contributions will come from
your savings if we disregard working
in retirement for income.
Building up your savings in those
working years preceding your
retirement is critical to getting
the highest possible savings
accumulation to help out with
retirement income. And so you can
count on those savings you’ll want
to invest them in a conservative
manner. If you have enough savings
to allocate between various asset
categories you might chose something
like 10% in money markets, 50% in
secure bonds – or mutual a mutual
fund of bonds, and 40% in high
quality stocks, some paying solid
dividends.
Limit your income from savings to 4%
of its value
In any case, fluctuations in the
markets will occur so that you don’t
deplete your savings, you might
consider restricting your annual
withdrawals from your savings.
Typically, restricting your
withdrawals to 4% per year - despite
their higher earnings – should guard
you from depleting through good and
bad market years.
Only as much income is needed as
there are living expenses to be paid
But remember, supporting yourself in
retirement means that your income
covers your living expenses. So if
you can’t develop more savings
income, you can alternatively lower
your living expenses. Reducing your
retirement living expenses can do
wonders to bolstering the adequacy
of a meagre income.
You can reduce your living expense
in three ways:
-
Finding a cheaper alternative to
supplying the same benefit –
like using cheaper brands
-
Eliminating a clearly
unnecessary expense – like debt
and smoking
-
Moving to where the cost of
living is lower – moving away
from cities or going offshore
One way of considering the benefit
of these expense reductions is to
compare them with the amount of
retirement savings that you don’t
have to accumulate to supply income
to pay for that expense.
So reducing your living expense by
just $10 per week means you don’t
need $10 of income from your savings
for that week – or $520 for that
year. But since you should only
withdraw 4% of your savings per
year, then you don’t need $13,000 of
savings since 4% of that would give
you that $520 you no longer spend.
Its not difficult if you’re willing
to buy smartly, eliminate what is no
good for you, and move to where you
get what you want at much less
expense to reduce you weekly living
expenses by a $300. That’s 30 times
$10 which eliminates the need of
$390,000 (= 30 times $13,000) of
savings – or the need for $15,600 (=
$300 time 52 weeks) annual income.
Well…..you get the idea. Reducing
your retirement expenses is a
serious way to make your meager
income go a long way.
Shane Flait is a writer and
educator. See more at
www.EasyRetirementKnowHow.com