Oversight of the Thrift Savings Plan: Ensuring the Integrity of Federal Employee Retirement Savings: Hearing Before the Financial Management, the Budg
March 19, 2008
Retirement: The Get Even Years
March 19, 2008
Retirement: The Get Even Years Customer Review: A tree died to make this book???
Looking for a light-hearted gift for my dad as he approached retirement, I thought that this book might fit the bill. Was I wrong! Amazingly, a book covering topics along the line of retirement, this was written as if a teenager were to read it. Don’t get me wrong… I’m not one of those types that doesn’t appreciate immature humor. This was not humorous… just stupid.
Report of the Committee on Strategy and Policy Review of Retirement Provision in South Africa
March 19, 2008
Report of the Committee on Strategy and Policy Review of Retirement Provision in South Africa
Protect Your Retirement Plan Through Global Investing
March 19, 2008
Protect Your Retirement Plan Through Global Investing You’ve done your homework and prepared for the day you turn 65. With the help of compound interest, mutual funds, tax shelters and insurance products you’ve reached your goal.
Then you expect the hard-earned money you’ve put into solid investments to keep you basking comfortably in the light of those sunset years. But how long can you really live off the income of your retirement fund?
Your calculations should reflect three important themes – inflation, taxes and longer life expectancies. And quite likely, you will have to consider asset protection as well in this litigious age.
The world is constantly changing. Your retirement plans will have to be able to adapt to new realities.
Demographic trends have been a primary reason for the instability — if not bankruptcy — of government-sponsored pension schemes in the graying developed world. Individual investors are faced with the reality of the social safety net being pulled out from under them, or at least severely curtailed. But also, longer life spans mean that an investor’s private portfolio will now be burdened with the task of having to provide income and security for much longer retirement periods. Alternatively, there is a chance that you — or your spouse – will live long enough to regret the investment mistakes you make with your pension funds.
Longer life spans call for a radical change in investment thinking. The conventional wisdom of financial planning is that once you retire, you ought to invest heavily in fixed-income assets. This has become an outdated concept. If you can now expect to live 20 years after retiring, your investment horizon at age 65 should still be looking towards the long haul. Modern medicine has made it worthwhile taking greater risks in order to increase returns on your investments. The alternative is to let inflation eat into them in the extra time you have. Inflation and demographics tends to equalize differences in investing strategies among pre-retirement investors and retired ones.
Americans (surprisingly) ready for retirement, survey finds.(Retirement Planning)(AXA Financial Inc. conducts survey): An article from: National Underwriter Life & Health
March 19, 2008
Americans (surprisingly) ready for retirement, survey finds.(Retirement Planning)(AXA Financial Inc. conducts survey): An article from: National Underwriter Life & Health This digital document is an article from National Underwriter Life & Health, published by The National Underwriter Company on January 24, 2005. The length of the article is 699 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Americans (surprisingly) ready for retirement, survey finds.(Retirement Planning)(AXA Financial Inc. conducts survey)
Author: Jim Connolly
Publication: National Underwriter Life & Health (Magazine/Journal)
Date: January 24, 2005
Publisher: The National Underwriter Company
Volume: 109 Issue: 3 Page: 7(2)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Administering social security by fiscal crises: Disabled, retirees, and taxpayers paying the price : hearing before the Subcommittee on Retirement Income … Second Congress, first session, May 23, 1991
March 16, 2008
Law enforcement retirement coverage: Hearing before the Subcommittee on the Civil Service of the Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives, … Congress, first session, September 9, 1999
March 16, 2008
Firm brings retirement planning under one roof: convenience drives desire to help clients prepare for future.(Finance)(Centara Capital Management Group, … An article from: San Diego Business Journal
March 16, 2008
Firm brings retirement planning under one roof: convenience drives desire to help clients prepare for future.(Finance)(Centara Capital Management Group, … An article from: San Diego Business Journal This digital document is an article from San Diego Business Journal, published by CBJ, L.P. on July 19, 2004. The length of the article is 964 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Firm brings retirement planning under one roof: convenience drives desire to help clients prepare for future.(Finance)(Centara Capital Management Group, Inc)
Author: Mike Allen
Publication: San Diego Business Journal (Magazine/Journal)
Date: July 19, 2004
Publisher: CBJ, L.P.
Volume: 25 Issue: 29 Page: 10(1)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
The New Working Woman’s Guide to Retirement Planning: Saving and Investing Now for a Secure Future
March 16, 2008
The New Working Woman’s Guide to Retirement Planning: Saving and Investing Now for a Secure Future
For those who believe money is money, whether you are male or female, The New Working Woman’s Guide to Retirement Planning shows why saving for retirement is different–and difficult–for women. Martha Priddy Patterson offers practical advice and usable solutions to the retirement planning obstacles women have to overcome.
Although women are gaining equal pension coverage with men and women’s wages are ever slowly increasing, the need for retirement saving and planning, for both women and men, has never been greater. Through her professional and personal experiences, Patterson–an attorney who has spent 15 years specializing in employee benefits law–found that women were not paying attention to their financial retirement future. Case studies of four women at different stages of their lives, with a variety of careers and career patterns, demonstrate how retirement benefits grow–or disappear.
This new edition contains current up-to-the-minute information on new retirement planning options such as Roth IRAs, cash balance plans, SIMPLE plans, enhanced coverage of 401(k) plans, and the future of Social Security.
Customer Review: Tops in My Book!
I read “The Working Woman’s Guide to Retirement Planning” several years ago and was surprised to learn of the many reasons why women need to save for retirement differently from men. I put together my own retirement plan after reading it and now I’m retiring and taking my RV on the road for the next few years. I’ve read the updated version, “The New Woman’s Guide to Retirement Planning,” and hope many other women get as much out of it as I did the first one.
Customer Review: Lots of meat!
As a financial advisor who specializes in working with women, I am so happy to see something for the general consumer that has a lot of meat to it. Usually most of the retirement information gets briefly mentioned and then brushed aside with a note that it’s important stuff and you need to understand it–but there’s usually no help given on how to understand it! This book provides the help in an easy to read and understand format. Love it!
The Social Security (Widow’s Benefit and Retirement Pensions) (Amendment) Regulations 1992 (Statutory Instruments: 1992: 1695)
March 16, 2008
