Thursday, August 9, 2007

Pension Management - Can We Do It Better?

Everybody wants to be able to afford to retire happily and securely in some wonderful place where great hobbies are available, with a nice respectable community of like-minded residents.

Managing Pension Plans: A Comprehensive Guide to Improving Plan Performance
by Dennis E. Logue,Jack S. Rader

Managing Pension Plans is essential for anyone who wants to know about pension fund management. Logue and Rader have distilled an complex subject into a comprehensible work. Their excellent book fills a void, providing an accessible, yet complete guide for finance professionals, students, and anyone involved in the pension plan decision.

The unfortunate drawback to this entire plan is, of course, the money. Such luxuries are expensive and if you imagine you have always spent a small fortune each month trying to keep your lifestyle going along a pleasant track, then think what you are going to have to allow for when every day is fundamentally a holiday.

Some people think that retirement is some sort of holding stage just slightly short of actual death, and it therefore might seem silly to stash away a huge amount of money to fund this stage along life’s rich path. Well, they could not be more mistaken.

Many people spend twenty or even thirty years in retirement. Could you fund your living expenses for the next thirty years without working another day? I know I could not. Many pension schemes and life management companies base their policies on standard scenarios, where the man is four or five years older than the woman, both working, expected to retire at the appropriate time, with no contingencies allowed for, such as sudden death of the man and the woman being considerably younger.

My own parents staged their retirement in the worst possible way. My mother was more than ten years younger than my father and he died with a very small pension payable, as he was still working and expected to continue doing so. My mother was unexpectedly left with a tiny pension yet enormous financial commitments and no other source of income. Her final years were spent worrying about bills.

Friends of mine got themselves into a huge problem by deciding to divorce in their later years. Of course their pension covered only a joint payment based on the assumption they would always be together. In an age where divorce is almost more commonplace than successful marriage, that is a startling assumption to make. Not that I have a solution to the problem. As always I prefer to highlight the difficulties and let someone else find the solution to them, it is what I do best!

0 comments: