Tag Archives: Generation Y

Why Financial Independence is a better goal than Retirement (Adapted from a Speech)

TMintBelow is the text for a speech I delivered Monday evening at Toastmasters Port Credit. I’ll be devoting some full blogs to Toastmasters in time, probably under the Entrepreneurship section, because it helps people of any age cultivate two critical skills: public speaking and leadership. Since the idea is to speak without notes, my actual delivery was not identical to what you see below. It has been adapted for the blog but in a few days I may put up a video of my performance, which was clocked at around eight minutes. I imagine this expanded version would take 15!

jontwitterimage
Jon Chevreau (Twitter).

Thank you Mr. Toastmaster, fellow Toastmasters and esteemed guests. As I look around this room, I see a mix of people: everyone from students and those just embarking on the workforce to people who are already retired.

I’ve worked as a financial journalist for more than 20 years and can tell you the word Retirement is a favorite word of both the financial industry and the media. It’s a handy way to depict a far-in-the future “dream” that conveniently helps banks, mutual fund companies, insurance companies and others sell various financial products, from funds to annuities. And we in the media are almost as fond of the term retirement: I’ve seldom witnessed a newspaper, magazine or web site that turned away financial advertising!

I’m 61 and you could call me semi-retired. But my message to the younger people in the audience, and even some of the middle-aged ones who fear they’ve not saved enough, is FORGET RETIREMENT!

Is this heresy? Not at all. Because there is a better term: Financial Independence. As some of you may know, a month ago I launched a new web site called the Financial Independence Hub and everything I’m saying here can be found at the site.

alan_moore
XY Planning’s Alan Moore

In fact, it includes a guest blog by Alan Moore of XY Planning Network in the US who posted a blog on exactly the topic I’m talking about here. The X and Y refers to Generations X and Y, so he is providing financial planning advice to millennials and young people. And he too is telling them to forget about retirement but instead to seek Financial Independence.

Aren’t the two terms the same thing? Not really. To me, Retirement is the full-stop retirement our parents or grandparents enjoyed if they were lucky. They got a job out of college, enrolled in a Defined Benefit pension that guaranteed a certain steady future stream of income, hung in for the gold watch for 30 or 35 years, then retired at the traditional retirement age of 65. They could now watch day-time TV, golf, nap, play bridge or putter in the garden to their heart’s content for a decade or three. This is what I call the “full-stop” sudden retirement.

Perhaps some of you here are now enjoying such a retirement. Like Mark over there.

Show of hands: how many of you younger people here think they’ll be able to rely on a DB pension when they’re as old as Mark or me? And how many think they’ll stay with a single employer long enough to collect a big enough pension that they’ll never have to work again?

To the young, Retirement is a remote unattainable concept

The problem with the term Retirement is that it seems so terribly far away for young people. The official retirement age keeps rising: it’s now 67 for younger folk instead of 65, if you’re talking about the eligibility age for Old Age Security, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it reached 70 at some point. So telling a 20-year old they should cancel their SmartPhone service in order to save money for a retirement half a century away is hardly an inspiring message, is it?

But that’s what all the retirement peddlers want you to do: put away 10% or preferably 20% of your income by practicing delayed gratification. They may tell you that you’ll need a million dollars or more in order to retire one day. Too often, sadly, young people hear that and figure it’s so impossible they may as well give up and spend it while they have it.

In other words, they are telling young people that in order to enjoy a decade or two of leisure when you’re old and grey, that you need to deny yourself pleasures like travel or eating out while you’re enjoying your youth.

Let me tell you, any of the grey hairs here would probably love to take their retirement savings and use it to book passage on a time machine that would let them relive the Swinging Sixties. If you’re 20 today, I imagine that your 70-year old future self would feel the same way about your life right now.

A more attainable goal

So what do I suggest as a substitute for the word Retirement? I call it Findependence, which is just a contraction of Financial Independence. I’ve written a book,  Findependence Day, which is just the day you’ve reached Financial Independence. The ebook I talked about in my third speech here is a sort of “Coles Notes” summary of that book.

But what do I mean by Financial Independence?

I like to refer people to the definition in Wikipedia:

Financial independence is generally used to describe the state of having sufficient personal wealth to live, without having to work actively for basic necessities.[1] For financially independent people, their assets generate income that is greater than their expenses.

 

In practice, I think this means being able to survive without the single stream of income most call a full-time job.

Leaving the nest at 27 is NOT Financial Independence!

Depositphotos_13980277_xsDefined this way, Findependence can occur decades before the traditional Retirement, so it’s a goal that young people may find is more worth shooting for. Interestingly, last week I blogged at MoneySense and at the Hub about a study about young people and their financial readiness to leave home. They used what I consider an incorrect definition of financial independence: that if they left the nest and stopped depending on the Bank of Mum and Dad, that they were therefore financially independent. If they could get a job and pay their rent, that was the definition, which resulted in the absurd headline that most millennials hope to be financially independent by age 27.

I don’t think so. Even with DB pensions, the earliest most people aspired to Financial Independence was 55, which is the earliest some pensions permit early retirement. Anyone hear of Freedom 55? That London life campaign was one of the most successful sales pitches for Early Retirement. Yet only a few government workers or business executives who strike it rich ever retire that early.

Why do billionaires keep working?

Why is that billionaires like Warren Buffett continue to work? Or young tech entrepreneurs like Mark Zuckerburg? Don’t you think Zuckerburg, who’s all of age 31 or so, couldn’t be findependent by now? Obviously, they have passion and are driven by purpose.

What does that tell you? Age 55 is way too young to “retire’ in the classic sense of doing nothing: playing golf, watching daytime TV, reading all day. Yes, many people THINK they’ll travel all the time once they retire but as I wrote on another blog last week, travel is overrated and expensive, and is really something you would only want to do some of the time, not ALL of the time.

Integrating the Three Boxes of Life

threeboxesoflifeFindependence is about integrating education, work and play. On my sister site, Findependence.TV,  I’m interviewed about a concept called The Three Boxes of Life, which is the title of a classic book by Richard Bolles. In the old days, we started life in the first box, Education, spent 15 or so years there, then graduated to the second box, Work. We stayed there for 35 to 50 years, and then came traditional Retirement, the third box of total play and leisure.

On the video, I talk about there being really only a single day: you work a bit each day and make money, you learn a bit each day and at the end of the day, you may “play” by getting some exercise, reading, watching TV or whatever.

On the site, there are blogs on concepts like mini-retirements and the four-hour workweek. Wouldn’t it make more sense to take the occasional mid-career sabattical or series of three-month vacations earlier in life, rather than saving it all for ten or 20 years of doing nothing when you’re too feeble to appreciate it? That’s why the subtitle of Findependence Day as well as The Financial Independence Hub is “While you’re still young enough to enjoy it.”

Plan for Longevity, not Retirement

FullSizeRender
Meta celebrates her 98th birthday. With Alizon Sharon (c) and Ruth Snowden (r).

Life expectancies are on the rise because of advances in medical science and more of us are practicing better health habits, with a focus on proper diet and exercise.

We can all expect to live a lot longer than we once thought, which is why the “Hub” ends with a section on Aging and Longevity. There you’ll find some blogs by Mark Venning of ChangeRangers.com, who coined the phrase “Plan for Longevity, Not Retirement.” I think it’s a great concept.

And it isn’t just a theoretical concept. On Sunday, we had a dinner party for a female friend of ours who celebrated her 98th birthday. She showed us a custom-printed card from – get this – her co-workers. You see, Meta still works two half-days a week at a local printing company. So she still spends a little time in the Work box. She also reads a lot, swapping books with my wife (Ruth, above), so part of her days are in the Education box. And she still travels and parties, so that’s the Leisure box.

Sounds like Findependence in action!

 

Why Millennials should plan for Financial Independence, NOT retirement!

alan_moore
Alan Moore, XY Planning Network

 By Alan Moore

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Two major issues make the concept of retirement planning difficult to grasp for many members of Generation Y. This group, also known as the millennials, ranges in age from the young twenties to the mid thirties. At this age, they have anywhere from 30 to 40 years (or more) of a working career ahead of them.

That makes the concept of retirement pretty abstract. It’s difficult to envision something more years into the future than years you’ve been alive!

The other issue that complicates matters is the fact the average American is living longer than ever before. Gen Y isn’t likely to retire at 63 and expire a decade later. Their retirement savings will likely need to last more than 20 or 30 years if they don’t want to outlive their nest eggs.

These two factors – the fact that retirement is decades in the future, and the fact that retirement itself may last decades – makes it hard for Gen Yers to get excited about the concept of retirement planning. It’s overwhelming to think of putting away your hard-earned money today for a time in life you can’t even imagine, and it’s overwhelming when you think of the lump sum of money you’d need to save to rely on for more than 30 years in your old age.

Making the Shift from Retirement Planning to the Idea of Financial Independence

The idea of a “retirement” wasn’t originally designed for what millennials will likely face in the future. The economy, job market, and corporate culture has changed (read: no more pensions, no more life-time job with a single company). It’s unlikely that younger generations will reach a certain age and simply stop working – and reasons why they shouldn’t keep piling up.

It seems that avoiding work that leaves you unfulfilled or stressed, and taking occasional breaks from hard work, is rewarding and good for us. But putting a complete stop to work? That leads to boredom and other problems for retirees.

Ultimately, research suggests we need to have purpose at all stages of life. So instead of putting the focus on retiring from work at some distant, fuzzy point in the future and being inactive until our lives come to an end, we need to focus on building a great life right now while making progress toward financial independence.

What Is Financial Independence, and Why Is It Better for Gen Y?

Financial independence means developing enough income to pay all expenses indefinitely, without needing to work full-time to bring in that money.

Why is the concept of financial independence something easier for Gen Y to grasp than the concept of retirement? Because it completely changes the goal and makes it much more realistic and attainable.

You’ve probably heard of the 4% rule, which says that you can take 4% out of an account on an ongoing basis. According to this, a nest egg of $1,000,000 will produce around $40,000 per year. The flip side is by creating an income stream of $3,333/month, it is equivalent to having saved one million dollars! For many people, it’s much easier to create a passive income stream of a few thousand dollars per month than it is to save up a lump sum of a million dollars.

And for most people who are financially independent, they use this freedom from an obligatory job to pursue (paying) work they feel passionately about. So they don’t feel the need to just stop working, and view financial independence as an opportunity to pursue activities they enjoy without having to stress about the amount of money they generate.

How You Can Get Started Now

In addition to what you save and invest from your full-time job, you can get started on financial independence by creating additional income streams on the side. The goal is to make these streams as passive as possible, to create cash flow that funds your freedom.

It’s important to start now because very few streams of income are 100% passive – and almost none are passive when you begin to establish them. To get you going, consider these ideas that you could take to build a small stream of passive income:

 

  • Real estate: When you’re ready to move out of your starter home, don’t sell the property. Rent it out and let it become an income source for you instead. Note that this path is not for everyone; being a landlord can be tough and expensive if you want to go 100% passive (by hiring a management company to handle your tenants for you).
  • Building a side business: Your own business can become passive with time – but it takes a tremendous amount of work to grow it to that point. So start now! Create a side hustle or side business that you can work on and grow in your free time. This generates more income for you to invest now, and can provide an income stream in the future when you’re ready to scale back on your working hours.
  • Monetize a hobby: You can always take something you already enjoy and monetize it. If you work with something tangible (like creating art or other products), start selling what you make. If your hobby is something like an activity you do (think running or golfing), share your expertise and start teaching others.
  • Leverage your current assets: Wisely investing your current assets is another way to create passive income (via dividends, for example). This is another path that won’t be for everyone, but it is an option that’s available.

There’s no limit to what kind of small income streams you can create, especially if you’re willing to work hard and establish them now. Financial independence is within reach, and much more so than any fuzzy concepts about a far-off retirement that sees you generating zero income, forcing you to live off a massive amount that you had to first save.

So forget about trying to plan for retirement. Work to reach financial independence instead. You’ll get there sooner and have more fun doing it.

XYPlanningAlan Moore, MS, CFP® is the co-founder of the XY Planning Network and president of Serenity Financial Consulting, a fee-only RIA and location-independent financial planning firm. He is passionate about helping financial planners start and grow their own fee-only firms to serve Gen X & Gen Y clients largely ignored by traditional firms. Alan has been recognized by Investment News as a top “40 Under 40″ in financial planning, and by Wealth Management as one of “The 10 to Watch in 2015.”  He frequently speaks on topics related to technology, marketing, and business coaching, and has been quoted in publications including The Wall Street Journal, Forbes and The New York Times. He lives in Bozeman, MT so he can hit the slopes on powder days.