MONDE-HISTOIRE-CULTURE GÉNÉRALE
Vous souhaitez réagir à ce message ? Créez un compte en quelques clics ou connectez-vous pour continuer.
MONDE-HISTOIRE-CULTURE GÉNÉRALE

Vues Du Monde : ce Forum MONDE-HISTOIRE-CULTURE GÉNÉRALE est lieu d'échange, d'apprentissage et d'ouverture sur le monde.IL EXISTE MILLE MANIÈRES DE MENTIR, MAIS UNE SEULE DE DIRE LA VÉRITÉ.
 
AccueilAccueil  PortailPortail  GalerieGalerie  RechercherRechercher  Dernières imagesDernières images  S'enregistrerS'enregistrer  Connexion  
Derniers sujets
Marque-page social
Marque-page social reddit      

Conservez et partagez l'adresse de MONDE-HISTOIRE-CULTURE GÉNÉRALE sur votre site de social bookmarking
QUOI DE NEUF SUR NOTRE PLANETE
LA FRANCE NON RECONNAISSANTE
Ephémerides
-50%
Le deal à ne pas rater :
Friteuse sans huile – PHILIPS – Airfryer HD9200/90 Série 3000
54.99 € 109.99 €
Voir le deal

 

 Retired by 50: What it really takes

Aller en bas 
AuteurMessage
mihou
Rang: Administrateur
mihou


Nombre de messages : 8092
Localisation : Washington D.C.
Date d'inscription : 28/05/2005

Retired by 50: What it really takes Empty
MessageSujet: Retired by 50: What it really takes   Retired by 50: What it really takes EmptySam 20 Déc - 17:06

Retired by 50: What it really takes

It's
possible to pinch pennies in your 30s so that you can give up the daily
grind by 50. Just don't expect to spend the rest of your life on the
golf course.

By Liz Pulliam WestonThink it's impossible to retire in your 40s? I'd like you to meet some ordinary folks who have done it."Ordinary"
may be a misnomer, because retiring after just 20 years or so in the
workplace is an extraordinary act, and most took extraordinary measures
to get where they are. But they're ordinary in the sense that they were
working people with pretty regular jobs. They didn't strike it rich
with stock options, inheritances or the lottery.Most of them
have kids. Most lived in high-cost areas -- Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Washington, D.C., suburban New Jersey. Most didn't start really saving
until their 30s (although the one who started at 28 wound up retiring
at 35). Their retirements look different from the retirements
depicted on television. These folks don't live on the golf course or
roam the country in 32-foot recreational vehicles. Most, in fact, are
actually still working -- but usually part time and in their own
businesses, doing things they feel strongly about. They've retired from
the 9-to-5 world, but not from their passions.In short, their
retirements look a lot like the retirements many people have planned
for themselves; about two-thirds of baby boomers plan to work in
retirement, according to an AARP poll. The folks I'm writing about are just two or three decades ahead of schedule.People
who retire so early often have several traits in common, said Jan
Dahlin Geiger, a Certified Financial Planner and author of the book,
"Get Your Assets in Gear! Smart Money Strategies." They're:

  • Allergic to debt."Debt is the opposite of savings," Geiger said, "and you don't get to be rich if you don't save."


  • Acutely aware of the power of time. Early
    retirees know that the sooner they put money to work for them, the more
    they'll eventually have. Even small amounts, if diligently saved and
    invested, can grow to whopping sums over time, thanks to the power of
    compound interest.Retired by 50: What it really takes Bolon-Family-01_210Janine Bolon


  • More interested in their goal than what the neighbors think. You
    may realize that you can't keep up with the Joneses and have any hope
    of retiring early (or even of retiring at all, depending on how far you
    take your consumerism). But you may not understand how very different
    your life might have to be from those around you to retire young.
The first two couples I'll introduce you to illustrate that point vividly. Let's meet them now.The Bolons

Janine
and Brad Bolon were 30-something "DINKs" -- dual income, no kids --
when a pregnancy and two books completely changed their lives.Janine,
a biochemist, wanted to be a stay-at-home mom, a decision that would
cause their nearly six-figure income to drop by about half.Video on MSN Money

Retired by 50: What it really takes Retirementplans_100

Retired by 50: What it really takes Video_play Retirement planning for boomers
Some baby boomers can expect to live comfortably on pensions and Social Security, but many still need to build their nest egg.

But the two books -- "Your Money or Your Life" by Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin, and "The Complete Tightwad Gazette"
by Amy Dacyczyn -- convinced her that she could not only stay at home,
but also save enough doing so that Brad could retire in 14 years.She wrote up a plan and showed it to her husband."He was skeptical," Bolon remembers. "(But) he said, 'Knock yourself out.'"She
did. Her savings strategy, coupled with a boost in Brad's income and a
cooperative real-estate market, helped them reach their goal a few
years early, even with the arrival of three more kids and while living
in one of the country's most expensive areas.Continued: Keeping costs lowShortly
after their eldest daughter was born, Brad accepted a job that more
than doubled his pay to $110,000 but that required a move from their
home in New Jersey to Southern California.Although Brad's
co-workers were living in McMansions and gated communities, the Bolons
bought a 1,500-square-foot townhouse in a less-affluent area of
Thousand Oaks. The townhouse was literally across the street from
Brad's office, which meant he could stroll to work and the family could
get by with one car -- "a beat-up old pickup," Janine called it.The
family was also within walking distance of three grocery stores and a
public library, which further reduced their fuel consumption. Janine
home-schooled the kids, now ages 11, 8, 5 and 4, and made saving money
her priority."We saved $35 a month by hanging the laundry
instead of using the dryer," Janine said. "We didn't use our air
conditioner more than six or seven days of the year," an accomplishment
in sunny Southern California."We went to 'U pick it' farms. I'd
go with the kids and we'd pick fruit . . . and can them and make
preserves," Janine said. "And I used a price book. That saved us $3,000
to $5,000 every year."(A price book, for frugality newbies, is a
notebook where you track the prices of commonly purchased items at
local stores over time so you can spot the true bargains and stock up.)As Brad's income rose, the family resisted the urge to ratchet up its spending and instead focused on building its net worth."We
made a whole bunch of life decisions that put us in a good position,"
Janine said. "We lived on $33,000 to $36,000 a year. . . . The rest of
our income we were stuffing into investments and Brad's 401(k)."Their
lifestyle was incomprehensible to many around them. Her middle-income
neighbors would sometimes leave donations, such as clothes for the
kids, on her porch."They were the nicest people," Janine said. "They assumed we must be pennies away from bankruptcy."Snubbed but satisfied

The
Bolons remember a distinctly chillier reception from some of Brad's
co-workers who lived in vast homes, sent their kids to private schools
and drove fancy cars. But Janine said she never let their snubs bother
her."I would walk into (a work social event) in my $60 thrift-store
gown and my $10 Payless shoes and I would feel like an actual
millionaire, because I was and they weren't," Janine said. "I didn't
have to drive a Mercedes to show people I'm wealthy."In 2004,
after eight years in California, the family pulled the plug. The Bolons
sold their townhouse for a tidy profit and moved to a home in Cedar
City, Utah, for which they paid cash.The family could live
solely on the income from investments, Janine said, but they prefer to
leave the money alone to grow. Brad consults for a local community
college. Janine is studying for a Ph.D. and has created a part-time
business teaching others her money-saving techniques through books, a Web site and lectures. Their
passion now is philanthropy. The Bolons believe strongly that giving
away at least 20% of the family's income is essential to their
financial and spiritual success.Fred Ecks and Ann Haebig

Work always seemed a bit overrated to Fred Ecks, 41.Ecks
got his first full-time job at 21 after graduating from California
Polytechnic State University with a degree in computer science. Eight
months later, he headed back to school to get a master's degree."I missed the freedom," Ecks said, "and the opportunity to learn something new every day."He
lasted about a year at his next full-time job before returning to
school for a doctorate. At one point, he tried to figure out how much
he would need to save to live on the interest of his investments, given
the 8% or so that short-term government bonds could earn back then. The
sum -- $121,000 -- seemed impossibly huge at the time.Video on MSN Money
Revenir en haut Aller en bas
https://vuesdumonde.forumactif.com/
mihou
Rang: Administrateur
mihou


Nombre de messages : 8092
Localisation : Washington D.C.
Date d'inscription : 28/05/2005

Retired by 50: What it really takes Empty
MessageSujet: Re: Retired by 50: What it really takes   Retired by 50: What it really takes EmptySam 20 Déc - 17:06

Retired by 50: What it really takes Retirementplans_100

Retired by 50: What it really takes Video_play Retirement planning for boomers
Some baby boomers can expect to live comfortably on pensions and Social Security, but many still need to build their nest egg.

"It would take me 10 years to save that much. I'd be 34," he remembered thinking. That seemed impossibly old, "so I gave up."Ecks
eventually settled in to full-time work, got married and bought a house
in Boulder, Colo. He had a mortgage, credit card debt "and lots of
toys," Ecks remembered. And he was getting "tired of being tired all of
the time."He was at a coffee shop when he heard a radio program
about the book, "Your Money or Your Life" (the same book that helped
transform the Bolons' lives). He went next door to a bookstore and
bought the tome, which he "devoured" over the next weekend. He became
"a man with a mission" to save enough money so that he could say
goodbye forever to paid work.That was in 1994, when he was 28.
Seven years later, at age 35, he achieved his goal, although he said
it's only recently that he's felt comfortable saying he's retired.Continued: Living in a vanThere
were some bumps along the way. His wife didn't share his sense of
mission, and they parted ways. He accepted a job at Sun Microsystems
and moved back to California, living in his van in the company's
parking lot for six months while he continued making payments on the
Colorado house.Eventually the home sold, and Ecks moved into the
first of a series of shared apartments and rented rooms. In the
notoriously high-cost Silicon Valley, he never paid more than $600 a
month for shelter. When a friend totaled his van, he paid cash for a
used Geo Metro to replace it. He ate out infrequently, cooked cheap
meals at home and shopped for clothes and household goods at thrift
stores.The Sun Microsystems job paid well and had benefits,
although Ecks never cracked the $100,000 annual pay mark. Still, he
saved 50% of his gross income while still pursuing his passions,
including learning to sail and traveling. He visited Mexico and
Guatemala on a Green Tortoise bus and drove to Alaska, among other
destinations.He wanted more meaning in his work, though, so in
1999 he took a computer job with Greenpeace at the environmental
organization's world headquarters in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Although
his pay was less than one-third of what he'd been making at Sun, his
cost of living was lower as well, and he still managed to save 25% of
his income.After a year or so, he was ready to come home. He
convinced Greenpeace to let him work half time in San Francisco. He
then bought the "world's smallest condo" -- a 307-square-foot space,
about the size of a decent hotel room -- in downtown San Francisco
shortly after Sept. 11, 2001. He paid the $127,250 purchase price with
a check.By the end of that year, he was ready to say goodbye to
paid work. He told Greenpeace to stop paying him even though he
continued working four hours a day as a volunteer. He now had the
ability to take off when he wanted, which he soon did by sailing to
Mexico with a friend.He'd also met a woman who shared his
passion for simple living and financial independence. Ann Haebig, now
38, said she's "always been frugal""Even in college I had in
mind the idea of saving 'enough' and eventually quitting," said Haebig,
who works as a database architect. "I didn't know how to make that goal
real in any concrete way until I found 'Your Money or Your Life' in
1999 or 2000. I started charting my progress in earnest then." Setting sail

Eventually,
Ecks sold the condo for $235,000, and the couple rented a house for a
while before buying an old houseboat for $3,100. They had it towed to a
marina in south San Francisco where Ecks could also moor his
30-year-old, 27-foot sailboat. Berth rent and a live-aboard fee set the
couple back $600 a month.Ecks figures his total monthly expenses run
about $1,500, which is actually less than his investments earn. Ann
works half time at CompuMentor and expects to be retired entirely
within seven years.Interestingly, Ann's passion for her goal of
early retirement isn't as strong since she stepped down from full-time
work to part-time employment a few years ago."I used to be a
dot-commer working too many hours at a job I just didn't care about.
Now I'm working half-time at a nonprofit and still saving money, while
spending my freed-up time on projects I really care about," Ann said.
"If I have to keep working longer because my salary's decreased, that's
OK with me. The journey's pleasant enough now that I'm not racing to
save that magic number of dollars like I once was." Video on MSN Money

Retired by 50: What it really takes Retirementplans_100

Retired by 50: What it really takes Video_play Retirement planning for boomers
Some baby boomers can expect to live comfortably on pensions and Social Security, but many still need to build their nest egg.

Ecks
is concerned enough about the eroding power of inflation that he keeps
half of his portfolio in stock-market investments (the other half is in
Treasury bonds). But his experience, and that of many others who have
embraced simple living, is that expenses actually go down over time as
they
get better at trimming costs.In any case, Ecks said, the couple feels
wealthy where it counts: in time and freedom."It's not what you have,"
he said. "It's how little you need."In my next column,
I'll introduce you to three more couples who have taken somewhat
different paths to early retirement. In the meantime, here's what you
can take away from these two stories:

  • What
    matters more than what you make is what you save (although a bigger
    income and rising home equity can get you to your goal sooner).


  • The
    decisions you make on the big expenses in your life -- where you live,
    what you drive, how much energy you burn -- have a profound impact on
    how much you can save.


  • That
    said, no expense is too small to review if your goal is to get out of
    work early. Trimming expenses not only allows you to save more, but
    means you can live on less in retirement, thus speeding you to your
    goal.
Liz Pulliam Weston's latest book, "Easy Money: How to Simplify Your Finances and Get What You Want Out of Life,"
is now available. Columns by Weston, the Web's most-read
personal-finance writer and winner of the 2007 Clarion Award for online
journalism, appear every Monday and Thursday, exclusively on MSN Money.
She also answers reader questions on the
Your Money message board.Published Sept. 13, 2007
http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/RetirementandWills/RetireEarly/RetiredBy50WhatItReallyTakes.aspx?page=all
Revenir en haut Aller en bas
https://vuesdumonde.forumactif.com/
 
Retired by 50: What it really takes
Revenir en haut 
Page 1 sur 1
 Sujets similaires
-
» Bolivia takes control of gas sale
» Garvey’s vision of unity takes root
» Battle for Lebanese town takes its toll
» Sculpt rock-hard abs with these new takes on a few old class
» You Can Build Herculean Legs, But it Takes Guts

Permission de ce forum:Vous ne pouvez pas répondre aux sujets dans ce forum
MONDE-HISTOIRE-CULTURE GÉNÉRALE :: ECONOMIE/ECONOMY :: IDEES-SUGGESTIONS/IDEAS AND SUGGESTIONS-
Sauter vers: