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![]() "DSK" wrote in message ... ... This country has a whole wave of people planning to enter retirement while their net worth is in the red. Why bother to start saving now? And if you start with less than nothing, what difference will it make how long you'll have to "make it" on your savings? You neoconservatives obviously know nothing at all about finance. Maxprop wrote: Right. But if that's the case how does one explain that I can retire today, draw greater than my current income and never touch the principle, even if interest rates plunge? Easy... ever expanding credit. Not in my case. I have no credit debt beyond my home. Another explanation is that you aren't including investment returns in your "current income" (which indeed they shouldn't be under many circumstances). Just because I'm not including my investment proceeds in my income does not imply that my income is not substantial. And I guess I should have stated that we could draw our current combined family income without touching the principle. The reason we can do that is quite simple: the principle is also substantial. Don't always attempt to find the red herring in every situation. Nothing fishy here--just sound investments. Not bad for a "neocon," eh? .... Where in my statement (the one you quoted) did I intimate that investing for one's future is a bad idea? Maybe I should have said "you neocons have absolutely no sense of sarcasm." That may be true--you've cornered the market in it. I only implied that the life expectancies were seriously exaggerated to be utilized as a sales tool in order to convince someone with a realistic life expectancy of 78 that he's going to live to be 95 and therefore needs a much larger nest egg. Obviously the larger the nest egg the better, but to fallaciously inflate life expectancies in order to sell something is bogus. Agreed, but obviously it's not working. The U.S. has a negative savings rate and there's little or no sign it's going up from here. I heard that the day after I posted that. Not good news for the government, who undoubtedly will be supporting a substantial percentage of the population on down the road. OTOH why not retire on credit cards? You can always shuffle your balance from one card to the next. This modern world of finance is a freeloader's dream scenario. I've no doubt someone (other than yourself) has thought of that as a retirement plan. Max |
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