Saving for retirement? How to soothe fears of not having enough money.
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If we didn鈥檛 always want to spend it on something else, we would all habitually save more.
In a recent survey, 55 percent of Americans said they fear not having enough money to last through their retirement. The Bank of America鈥檚 Merrill Edge survey, reported in USA Today, polled 1,000 people called the emerging affluent 鈥 those with $50,000-$250,000 in investments, excluding their homes and other real estate.聽First, note that the people in this category are already better off than the majority, and it bears repeating that these people have saved more than most Americans, and still they are worried about retirement. Maybe they are more prone to anxiety or maybe there are many people who underestimate their future needs and we have a serious problem on our hands.
OK, but that fear only goes so far, since the poll also found that 33 percent聽of people aren鈥檛 willing to cut back on their entertainment expenses, while 30 percent refuse to stop eating out and 28 percent won鈥檛 put off their vacations. Meanwhile, 63 percent聽said that living in the present is more important than the future. In other words, they decided聽to spend and not save. Even though their future selves will absolutely disagree with this choice, they aren鈥檛 talking to their future selves.
It is easy to spend money now, it makes us feel good 鈥 if only for a moment 鈥 and it is deeply ingrained in our habits. The survey also found that 89 percent have a household budget, but 66 percent聽of those people regularly fail to live within their budget.
The statistics in this poll square with my experiences in the past 20 years with clients who struggle to find balance in spending versus saving.
My advice? Adopt a countercultural approach when it comes to spending. Start by reading Aesop鈥檚 鈥淭he Ant and the Grasshopper鈥 or watch 鈥淎 Bug鈥檚 Life鈥 from Pixar. In Aesop鈥檚 fable, the ant works hard all summer and stores up food for winter while the grasshopper plays. Then, when winter comes, the grasshopper starves and begs the ant to share his food. In the Pixar movie, the grasshoppers steal the food they need.
The lesson here:
It is what it is.聽Today, our fear of not having enough later isn鈥檛 strong enough to overpower our desire to have more right now. In order to overcome this, we must cultivate a conversation between our current and future selves and an understanding of the coming retirement crisis.
It is what we made it,聽and what we continue to make it with every decision.聽This is entirely an issue of recognition and choice. As we come to know and love our future selves, we will recognize the problem and only then will we be able to 聽make a different choice.
It changes when we change.聽It is a real and serious problem, but it is entirely within our power to change it. We can鈥檛 fix it for everyone, but we can make better decisions for ourselves, and we can start by storing up a few resources for winter.
If you want to change, then internalize the message of Aesop鈥檚 fable: Do you want to be the ant or the grasshopper?