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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 10 page paper discussing how a financial planner should approach assisting clients in better planning for their retirement years. The 50-year-old client may not gain the kind of retirement he would have liked to have had, but beginning at 50 is greatly preferable to waiting until later, or not beginning at all. The 50-year-old client has opportunity to build a respectable retirement with stringent commitment now. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSfinRetirePl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the country in a $100,000 motor home and living comfortably for an unknown number of years are typical of the average pre-retirement vision. For increasing numbers of individuals, however,
the realities of retirement may substitute day trips to the next town in an aging car while living significantly less than comfortably. Perhaps as in no other area, the
clich? that people dont plan to fail, they merely fail to plan clearly and distinctly applies to retirement planning. In the closing years
of the 19th century, average life expectancy was under 60 years. When the retirement age of 65 was established as being the norm, relatively few people lived past that
age. This is not the case in todays world, of course, where increasing numbers of people are living into their 90s or even past 100. Some believe the
number of individuals living past 100 will increase nearly exponentially during the next 50 years or so; others claim that sort of gain to be impossible. No doubt, demographers
of the late 19th century would have supported the same view regarding advances in life expectancy. Retirements Promises Higgins (2003) reports that "Many
planners working on retirement plans for baby boomers are finding the same results - most boomers havent done enough retirement planning, if theyve done any at all" (p. 17).
One planner claims that todays baby boomers have good cause for not having saved enough to date. "Between having the big house, two or three cars, a place on
the lake, a nice vacation every year and putting two kids through college, there hasnt been enough discretionary income to save for retirement" (Higgins, 2003; p. 17).
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