Is Retirement Dead? Most Americans Have No Retirement Savings | Adam Taggart

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
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    Six years ago, I wrote an article titled 'Grasshopper Nation', warning about how poorly prepared Americans are for retirement.
    Sadly, the data has only gotten worse since then.
    I’ll deliver the punchline here first, and then get into the underlying data:
    Right now, as the largest generational cohort in history has reached retirement age, tens of millions of Baby Boomers in America have insufficient savings to retire or otherwise fund their living costs during their twilight years.
    This is a massive economic and humanitarian crisis in the making, with no credible plans from the government currently on the table to address it.
    In fact, we’re not even having a national discussion about it right now, because we’re not yet even acknowledging that we have a problem.
    Until we shake free from this denial, we will continue to fall deeper into this hole of generational insolvency - while the timeline of consequences accelerates towards us at a faster rate.
    Ok, now that I’ve got your attention, let’s look at the data...watch this video.
    ________
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Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @Wealthion
    @Wealthion  Před 2 lety +1538

    WATCH Wealthion's free RETIREMENT PLANNING webinar at wealthion.com/retirementplanning

    • @charlesbrown9213
      @charlesbrown9213 Před 2 lety +3

      Great video as always Adam.
      Its true, the "system" (laws) are woefully tilted to the top 10%. I got my first taste of that in the early 80's, as I was graduating high school. I had good grades and expected to transition immediately to college. Then Reagan decided to "set the Social Security house in fiscal order, in part by eliminating SocSec survivor benefits for orphans, post high school. I was one of those orphans. They could have removed the ceiling on FICA contributions, but instead decided to lean on orphans to fix Soc Security. The millionaires always have had more lobbyists than orphans.
      So i understand the unfairness endemic in the system.
      That said, I busted my hump (had "no life" during my 20's) eventually got that degree. Despite starting from poor conditions, I've saved every year, even while attending college. Despite "the system", it can be done. These boomers who don't have 2 nickels to rub together, I really cannot muster any empathy for. They've lived in the best of times. If, after 40 years, they have no savings, well, for most, that is the culmination of a lifetime of bad choices. Americans (and most other people) generally indulge in chronic "immediate gratification". The Govt DOES have a plan for them: Social Security -- enacted to SUPPLEMENT personal savings and pensions (now, IRAs/401ks). If many find that to be "not enough", perhaps they should consider co-habiting/shared living arrangements. Replacing beef/chicken with soup as their main meal might help them to economize too. Many boomers have houses. The govt set up reverse mortgages for "house rich" seniors. that would be an option too.
      Bailing out seniors who squandered their earning years when they should have socked it away, is not a very compelling investment. I doubt the Millenials or GenZ would be interested in doing so, either. Sorry Granny, you are on your own!!

    • @peternyc
      @peternyc Před 2 lety +1

      @@charlesbrown9213 19th century England was laizzes faire domestically, and brutal empire to the rest of the world. Their brand of capitalism was identical to American capitalism today - financial capitalism based on colonial conquest in the outside world, and pauper wages domestically, with no safety net. As capitalism has needed more and more consumption to create the need for more and more markets, the ability to be strictly laizzes faire has receded, and was replaced by debt as the driver of "production." The ruling class then and now understood that speculation was quick and easy money, and used banking and real estate to create rigged opportunities for capital gains and rentier streams of income. Today's stock market and endless asset purchases by the Fed, plus the regressive tax structure and corrupt fiscal spending makes for a world that is designed by and for the owners of capital at the expense of the non-owners of capital. The U.S. had its opportunity to turn capitalism into a benevolent system that rewards ingenuity and creativity. That was the hope of the New Deal. That world is dead. In its place is the corrupt, decadent world of a dying empire, just as in Ancient Rome.
      The enlightenment philosophers, our country's founding fathers included, understood that too much wealth was a dangerous thing. Adam Smith himself understood that super high profits that extend over too long a period of time are a contradiction in a free market. This means the super high profits are the result of monopoly and not of competition. This is America - super high profits for way too long - only today it's due to international monopoly, meaning imperialism.
      The blue collar jobs that enabled people like TV's Archie Bunker to own ahome in NYC, have a stay at home wife, and raise a child are long gone.
      The ability for working class people to make money in America since Reagan depended on one's ability to be business minded. Most people are adverse to this. Most people have a subconscious revulsion to the idea of pursing money for its own sake. Those that are talented at it are in the minority. Those that are super talented at it are disproportionately affected by mental illness such as psychopathology. A disproportionate percent of corporate CEO's and high level executives are no doubt psychopaths.
      The definition of a psychopath is someone who is incapable of empathy. Your comment shows not only a complete disregard for the welfare of others, but goes beyond that. You show pleasure at the thought of others experiencing pain. This is textbook psychopathy 101. Your unfortunate experience regarding your parents enables you to provide cover for your sadism. It doesn't work. My mom and dad died when I was 18. I have no siblings or cousins, and my aunts and uncles were worthless as family. I survived and "made it" to a certain degree. I don't wish hardship on others, yet you enjoy the thought. Your orphan story doesn't erase your mental illness. It only allows you to find like minded friends. The Republican Party is full of people like you. Charles Dickens and Hans Christian Andersen wrote in order to reveal to readers the horror of living in a society governed by people with no empathy.
      Enjoy your moment. It won't last. When too many people have too little for too long, revolutions happen. Unless that moment produces fascism, which it might, your moment will pass.

    • @charlesbrown9213
      @charlesbrown9213 Před 2 lety +3

      @@peternyc - my, my, are you a licensed psychologist, or do you just play one on YT?
      I actually don't disagree with most of the "history lesson" -- which, by the way, comes off as very "preachy".
      What was missing from your rather in-depth analysis was any mention of individual responsibility. People make stupid decisions every day. This country is great in that people can make some bad decisions in their life, and still persevere and have an OK life -- one better than humans anywhere have had for most of human history.
      But some people -- a lot of them -- tend to make chronically bad decisions. Maybe they marry wrong. Or marry right, then get divorced -- a very costly life-decision. Maybe they decide to birth kids because they are bored, or want govt assistance. Maybe they go down the path of substance abuse. Or, maybe they decide to start down the path of crime. For many, they just want to spend money they don't have on things or experiences which their grandparents never had, and which they don't need.
      If someone is a "grasshopper" their whole life (i.e. irresponsible, not planning for their retirement), its a strange suggestion that other people (i.e other taxpayers) should do more for the grasshoppers than the grasshoppers were willing to do for themselves.
      There is a group of people -- a very large group, methinks, which are the "UNdeserving poor". But the beauty of liberty is that if you disagree with that statement, you can donate however much of your savings you wish, to sustain them. Just keep your hands out of my pocket - do not compel me by threat of imprisonment to follow your crusade for Utopia. -- down that path is serfdom and tyranny.

    • @peternyc
      @peternyc Před 2 lety +1

      @@charlesbrown9213 Ownership is what makes for a responsible person. Renters don't care. These are the types of people who make bad decisions as a rule, not as the exception. When a society is filled with renters, as ours is and 19th century England was, it is always corrupt, sadistic, and decadent. The libertarian idea of a society of owners is attractive, but is a fantasy. Power is always compounded in a laizzes faire economy, private ownership of what people need to survive breeds more private ownership and more irresponsible people which I am calling renters here. It's a vicious circle. The only way out is to create a larger public sphere, meaning public ownership of what we all need to live and prosper. Examples of the 2 extremes between absolute private ownership and absolute public ownership would be a slave owning society as was in antiquity and existed here until the Civil War on the one hand, and a pure socialist society where money doesn't exist and all work is voluntary. Such a fantasy world of socialism is obviously not imaginable now, but neither is the libertarian fantasy world you hold as ideal.
      You have to separate the person from the position the person holds. Individuals, even bad actors, are not the problem. It's the position they occupy that enables them to be bad actors that is the problem. Change the conditions and the bad actions disappear. Corruption, decadence, sadism are all characteristics of private ownership of other people's ability to survive. When all people become owners, whether in a libertarian sense or in a socialist sense, the bad actions diminish and disappear.
      If you want good libertarian philosophy of economics I recommend checking out the ideas of Henry George and Silvio Gesell. George was a 19th century American economic thinker who was pro-free market. His remedy to the ills of capitalism was to eliminate all economic rent seeking, which begins with land. Silvio Gesell had similar ideas of eliminating rent seeking, but in regards to money. Google "Wörgl Experiment" which happened in 1932 and transformed a destitute Austrian town during the depression into a healthy, productive, and happy town literally within a few months. The central bank of Austria forced the government to shut down the experiment and the town instantly reverted to abject poverty. You see, change the conditions and the people instantly change. Ownership is key. That which prevents ownership is bad. There was a really excellent monetary thinker from Belgium named Bernard Lietaer. He based his work on the ideas of Silvio Gesell.
      The overall point I'm trying to make is that when society is under the microscope, individuals are not the subject. The positions that the individuals hold are. Anglo libertarian philosophy so popular in America is a con game. It isn't real libertarian thinking, just as liberal Keynesian thinking is also not socialism. It too is a con game.
      Thanks for being polite in your reply to me. I admit I was hard on you. I apologize.

    • @charlesbrown9213
      @charlesbrown9213 Před 2 lety +4

      @@peternyc Your world-view removes individual responsibility. So, no one is to blame because we are all "victims". -- ONly the warm, embracing state can "save us from our victimhood". - That requires ever more powers vested in a central govt. That solution has been tried -- throughout history -- and leads to tyranny. Its had many names: pharoahism, monarchy, Socialism. Communism. But it always ends the same way, serfdom for the majority.
      These malevolent wealthy people which you blame for society's ills: Do you really believe they (or people like them) will not insinuate themselves into a more powerful state -- and use that increasingly powerful state to further enrich themselves? Homo sapiens are not angels. Some percent of us are covetous of power -- and have an innate need to dominate their fellow beings, to the advantage of the few.
      Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
      That govt governs best, which governs least.
      These concepts may seem trite, but 5000 years of human history have proven them true. The drafters of our founding documents -- the Constitution, Declaration of Independence, the Federal Papers -- the drafters were astute students of political history. That is why they insisted on limiting the power of the American state.
      Every man/woman is free to advance devote themselves to improving the lot of themselves and their fellow man. But if, by force of govt compulsion, you demand that I must adhere to your "dream", its as if you are shackling me with a harness to serve your ends, as though I were a dumb ox, with no will of my own. That is the antithesis of freedom, and anathema to my right to liberty.

  • @Dantursi1
    @Dantursi1 Před 2 měsíci +1807

    I believe the retirement crisis will get even worse. Many struggle to save due to low wages, rising prices, and exorbitant rents. With homeownership becoming unattainable for middle-class Americans, they may not have a home to rely on for retirement either.

    • @Rachadrian
      @Rachadrian Před 2 měsíci +4

      Consider buying stocks when the economy is not doing well, like during a recession. It could be a chance to buy them at a lower price and sell later when prices go up. Just keep in mind, this isn't financial advice, but sometimes it's better than keeping a lot of cash.

    • @michaelschiemer3
      @michaelschiemer3 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I’m closing in on retirement, too, and I have benefitted so much from using a financial advisor. I didn’t start early, so I knew the compound interest of index fund investing would not work for me. Funny how I pulled in more profit than some of my peers who had been investing for many years.

    • @SteveEstrada-js9nu
      @SteveEstrada-js9nu Před 2 měsíci +3

      How can I reach this adviser of yours? because I'm seeking for a more effective investment approach on my savings

    • @michaelschiemer3
      @michaelschiemer3 Před 2 měsíci +2

      There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Amber Dawn Brummit ” for about five aiyears now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.

    • @michaelschiemer3
      @michaelschiemer3 Před 2 měsíci +2

      The advisor that guides me is Amber Dawn Brummit, most likely the internet is where to find her basic info, just search her name. She's established.

  • @Beatricegove733
    @Beatricegove733 Před měsícem +1104

    More and more people might face a tough time in retirement. Low-paying jobs, inflation, and high rents make it hard to save. Now, middle-class Americans find it tough to own a home too, leaving them without a place to retire.

    • @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io
      @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io Před měsícem +2

      The increasing prices have impacted my plan to retire at 62, work part-time, and save for the future. I'm concerned about whether those who navigated the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am currently experiencing. The combination of stock market volatility and a decrease in income is causing anxiety about whether I'll have sufficient funds for retirement.

    • @carssimplified2195
      @carssimplified2195 Před měsícem +2

      This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.

    • @NicholasHarmon-ow3jl
      @NicholasHarmon-ow3jl Před měsícem +2

      How can I reach this person?

    • @carssimplified2195
      @carssimplified2195 Před měsícem +1

      ‘’Aileen Gertrude Tippy’’ is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.

    • @NicholasHarmon-ow3jl
      @NicholasHarmon-ow3jl Před měsícem +1

      I checked Aileen up out of curiosity and i must say i am impressed by her Credentials. i emailed her already, waiting on her response.

  • @SophiaChristian-so2of
    @SophiaChristian-so2of Před rokem +1677

    Retiring in 20 years? Due to inflation, you may need upwards of $2.6 million to maintain your existing lifestyle, with the ongoing effects of high inflation, lower forecasted stock market returns, and stagnant wages, achieving a secure early retirement could be more challenging than ever before.

    • @MarkFreeman-xi3rk
      @MarkFreeman-xi3rk Před rokem +2

      I suggest you offset your real estate and get into stocks, A recession as bad as it can be, provides good buying opportunities in the markets if you’re careful and it can also create volatility giving great short time buy and sell opportunities too. This is not financial advice but get buying, cash isn’t king at all in this time!

    • @AntonioBianh
      @AntonioBianh Před rokem +2

      @@MarkFreeman-xi3rk I agree. I have pulled in more than $435k since 2020 through my advisor. It pays off more in the long run to just pick quality stocks and ride with those stocks.

    • @JenniferDrawbridge
      @JenniferDrawbridge Před rokem +1

      @@AntonioBianh Mind if I ask you recommend this particular professional you use their service? i have quite a lot of marketing problems.

    • @AntonioBianh
      @AntonioBianh Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@JenniferDrawbridge Margaret Johnson Arndt is the coach that guides me, She has years of financial market experience, you can use something else but for me her strategy works hence my result. She provides entry and exit point for the securities I focus on.

    • @EmmanuelCage-xd7bt
      @EmmanuelCage-xd7bt Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@AntonioBianh thanks for sharing, After locating her, I composed an email and arranged a phone conversation. I'm optimistic that she will reply.

  • @PatrickLloyd-
    @PatrickLloyd- Před 9 měsíci +418

    Most Americans find it hard to retire comfortably amid economy downtrend. Some have close to nothing going into retirement, my question is, will you pay off mortgage as a near-retiree, or spread money for cashflow, to afford lifestyle after retirement?

    • @trane85
      @trane85 Před 9 měsíci +3

      as most investing-related questions, the answer is, it depends.. my best suggestion is to consider advisory management

    • @PhilipDunk
      @PhilipDunk Před 9 měsíci +3

      Agreed, the role of advisors can only be overlooked, but not denied. I remember in early 2020, during covid-outbreak, my portfolio worth around 300k took a slight fall, apparently due to the pandemic crash, at once I consulted an advisor in order to avoid panic-selling. As of today, my account has yielded big fat yields, and leverages on 7-figure, only cos I delegate my excesses right.

    • @sattler96
      @sattler96 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@PhilipDunk this is huge! mind if I look up the advisr that guides you please? only invest in my 401k through my employer for now, but enthused about diversifying my investments for a prosperous financial future

    • @PhilipDunk
      @PhilipDunk Před 9 měsíci +3

      I've shuffled through a few advisors in the past, but settled with “Vivian Carol Gioia” her service is exemplary. I'd suggest you research her further on your browser, sure you'll find her basic info.

    • @sattler96
      @sattler96 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@PhilipDunk very much appreciated, your response suggests a person of benevolence.. just inputted her full name on my browser, and came across her site, top-notch qualifications! she seems well-qualified

  • @Rubenbarlow
    @Rubenbarlow Před 8 měsíci +205

    My original retirement plan was to retire at 62, work part-time, and save money. However, high prices for everything have severely affected my plan. I'm concerned if people who went through the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am having now. The stock market is worrying me as my income has decreased, and I fear I won't have enough savings for retirement since I can't contribute as much as before.

    • @TommasaCollison
      @TommasaCollison Před 8 měsíci +1

      Generating significant proceeds, especially during a bear market, requires the implementation of sophisticated actions, which are most effectively carried out by experienced connoisseurs in the market.

    • @TazioParisi
      @TazioParisi Před 8 měsíci +1

      It's unfortunate most people don't have such information. I don't really blame people who panic. Lack of information can be a big hurdle. I've been making more than $30k passively by just investing through an advisor, and I don't have to do much work. Doesn't matter if the economy is misbehaving; great wealth managers will always make returns.

    • @JoeLarkins
      @JoeLarkins Před 8 měsíci +1

      I think this is something I should do, but I've been stalling for a long time now. I don't really know which firm to work with; I feel they are all the same.

    • @TazioParisi
      @TazioParisi Před 8 měsíci +1

      Stacey Lee Decker, my fiscal guide, holds a distinguished reputation in her field. I urge you to explore her qualifications and expertise further.

    • @NolaBuckhanan
      @NolaBuckhanan Před 8 měsíci +1

      I just googled her and I'm really impressed with her credentials; I reached out to her since I need all the assistance I can get. I just scheduled a call.

  • @Richardcarlett
    @Richardcarlett Před rokem +1110

    As part of my retirement plans and also owing to the very shaky housing market now, I just sold a property in Philly and I'm thinking to put the cash in stocks, I know everyone is saying its ripe enough, but Is this a good time to buy stocks? How long until a full recovery? How are other people in the same market raking in over $200k gains in months, I'm really just confused at this point.

    • @philipr1759
      @philipr1759 Před rokem +3

      Yes, a good number of folks are raking in huge 6 figure gains in this downtrend, but such strategies are mostly successfully executed by folks with in depth market knowledge, And it also all depends on how long you're willing to hold for, stocks might likely tank further, but making serious gains in this downtrend wouldn't be a problem if you're a pro.

    • @georgebarret
      @georgebarret Před rokem +3

      Reason I decided to work closely with a broker ever since the market got really tensed and the pressure became so much(I should be retiring in 17months) so I've had an brokerage-adviser guide me through the chaos, its been 9months and counting and I've made approx. 650K net from all of my holdings.

    • @DavidRiggs-dc7jk
      @DavidRiggs-dc7jk Před rokem +3

      @@georgebarret That's impressive, my portfolio have been tanking all year, tried learning new strategies to gain in the current market but all of that flew right over head, please would you mind suggesting the adviser you're using ?

    • @georgebarret
      @georgebarret Před rokem +3

      I thoroughly recommend Julie Anne Hoover, an investment advisor who is subject to US SEC regulation. She has assisted me with my portfolio for many years. Look her up online; she's a well-known figure.

    • @DavidRiggs-dc7jk
      @DavidRiggs-dc7jk Před rokem +2

      @@georgebarret She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.

  • @doran-f6w
    @doran-f6w Před 14 dny +517

    I came across your channel through this video-case studies are incredibly valuable, and I'm eager to see more in the future! Building wealth involves establishing routines, like consistently setting aside funds at regular intervals for smart investments.

    • @vickylarue
      @vickylarue Před 14 dny

      You're correct. I think the smartest way to go is to spread out your investments. By putting your money into different asset classes like bonds, real estate, and stocks from other countries, you can lower the risk if one part of the market goes bad.

    • @kevinvictor-s2w
      @kevinvictor-s2w Před 14 dny

      That sounds like a good plan. In the past two years, working closely with a financial market specialist, I've built a six-figure diversified stock portfolio. Now, I aim to diversify even more this year.

    • @shirelylinero
      @shirelylinero Před 14 dny

      Talking about a financial market specialist, do you consider anyone worthy of recommendations? I have about 100k to test the waters now that large cap stocks are at a discount... Thanks

    • @kevinvictor-s2w
      @kevinvictor-s2w Před 14 dny

      My CFA ’NICOLE ANASTASIA PLUMLEE’ a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further... She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.

    • @kevinvictor-s2w
      @kevinvictor-s2w Před 14 dny

      “NICOLE ANASTASIA PLUMLEE’’ is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.

  • @veronica.baker1
    @veronica.baker1 Před rokem +933

    Retirees who struggle to meet their basic needs are the ones who could not accumulate enough money during their active years to meet their needs. Retirement choices determine a lot of things. My parents both spent same number of years in the civil service, but my mom was investing through a wealth manager, and my dad through the 401k. They both retired millionaires.

    • @hunter-bourke21
      @hunter-bourke21 Před rokem +2

      This is true. I'm in my mid 50's now. My wife and I were following this same trajectory. Last two years, I pulled out my money and invested with her wealth manager. Not catching up with her profits over the years, but at least I earn more. I'm making money even before retiring, and my retirement fund has grown way more than it would have with just the 401(k). Haha.

    • @edward.abraham
      @edward.abraham Před rokem +2

      It's unfortunate most people don't have such information. I don't really blame people who panic. Lack of information can be a big hurdle. I've been making more than $21k passively by just investing through an advisor, and I don't have to do much work. Doesn't matter if the economy is misbehaving; great wealth managers will always make returns.

    • @Kim.beneteau
      @Kim.beneteau Před rokem +1

      @@edward.abraham Please tell me how can I connect to your advisor. My funds are being murdered by inflation, therefore I'm looking for a more profitable investing strategy to put them to work.

    • @edward.abraham
      @edward.abraham Před rokem

      @@Kim.beneteau My advisor is “Julia Ann Finnicum”. I've been working with her for a very long time. You could still check out others on the internet. She's an independent financial advisor, so her decisions have been really spectacular.

    • @rebecca_burns14
      @rebecca_burns14 Před rokem

      @@edward.abraham Insightful. Your counsel couldn't have come at a better moment because I'm currently barely holding on. I'll do some research on her online before calling her.

  • @AveryFetherolf
    @AveryFetherolf Před rokem +476

    I'm just 31 years old, but studying and doing the work to be financially free early before traditional retirement .. I hate seeing people around me living paycheck to paycheck and complaining. All roads have pointed to the financial market of some sort which is a good idea buh where else should I put money besides the financial market? I have $150,000

    • @CristianHulbert
      @CristianHulbert Před rokem +3

      Yep great question and that’s always the one - where would you rather be if you have an option. Financial-market for me seem the only way forward with my long time horizon (accrued almost $1.4m in gains) but if you don’t have that fortune of time it’s a tough market out there almost nowhere feels safe! . Just know the risk you're comfortable with . Mistake is expensive

    • @RachelBrinkmeier
      @RachelBrinkmeier Před rokem +2

      @@GarrettDills Hey, who is your pundit and how can I get in touch? I'm working two jobs and trying to save up to buy a house for my parents and me. I'm exhausted, and I don't want to feel this way anymore.

    • @ThormanBoucher
      @ThormanBoucher Před rokem +2

      @@GarrettDills Thank you. I just checked her out. She seems really proficient. I'll follow up with an email. Thanks for the lead.

  • @patrickbrussels4454
    @patrickbrussels4454 Před rokem +278

    I’m glad I pulled through, despite the crises. I am retiring next yr at 55 with 3 houses paid off worth 4.5 million . One is my place of residence the other 2 properties will give me $80,000per/yr rent . I will have an income stream of $20,000 per yr through my super which gives me total $100,000 a yr to live comfortably . I have no debts ... Stay Motivated!!

    • @patrickbrussels4454
      @patrickbrussels4454 Před rokem

      @Ivan Johnson What I think everyone need is a Financial Adviser, who can help you get in and out of any investment at any time and you'd sure be in Profit

    • @patrickbrussels4454
      @patrickbrussels4454 Před rokem

      *KATRINA VANRENSUM* That's whom i work with.

    • @patrickbrussels4454
      @patrickbrussels4454 Před rokem

      CZcams is a public place; i can't drop her information here but You can just put her name on google and you will be directed to her website and drop her your message.

    • @michaelwoythaler
      @michaelwoythaler Před rokem +3

      Doesn't pass the smell test.

    • @hugohabicht9957
      @hugohabicht9957 Před rokem +1

      Show off 😂

  • @wardsmyth5335
    @wardsmyth5335 Před rokem +401

    Adam, this is a great and long overdue discussion! Folks need to listen. My wife and I retired two year ago, hopefully well prepared. We are totally loving this time, we're all taught to work til we drop. Proper planning and implementation will open a window to a wonder (and I hope) long future.

    • @graywilliams_77.
      @graywilliams_77. Před rokem

      @susan nicky sorry for your divorce,
      there are actually ideas that could be put in place for solid gains during a crash, but such strategies are carried out by distinguished advisors..

    • @graywilliams_77.
      @graywilliams_77. Před rokem

      @susan nicky great share, just copied and pasted her full name on my browser, thankfully her site appeared top search! she seems first-rate, her creds speak for itself..

  • @oliviaralston1
    @oliviaralston1 Před rokem +26

    You work for 40yrs to have $1M in your
    retirement, meanwhile some people are putting just $10K in a meme coin from just few months ago and now they are multimillionaires....

    • @ademusiaka7198
      @ademusiaka7198 Před rokem

      You are right, to be a successful person in life require him or her of hard work and time

    • @Isabelle.h
      @Isabelle.h Před rokem

      The thing about been successful is working toward it and not going the other way round

    • @kirstenraedmund7346
      @kirstenraedmund7346 Před rokem

      It's obvious everyone is doing this online Investment

    • @Brookeinda
      @Brookeinda Před rokem

      ​@@kirstenraedmund7346I totally agree with you it has been an eye-opening experience for a lot of people.

    • @dustireller3953
      @dustireller3953 Před rokem

      Investment is the key to achieving success with the current pandemic slowing down so many businesses aww

  • @michaelblum3520
    @michaelblum3520 Před 2 lety +295

    I'm 82 years old and was a financial advisor. The key to financial independence in the U.S. and really everywhere is home ownership. When your home is paid off most other expenses can be dealt with especially food and basics. My experience is that most would be better off starting there. But the best future investment is in your family. People that invest time and money in their children and get along well with them rarely have to worry. Stocks and bonds are a distant second.

    • @niciassmith1204
      @niciassmith1204 Před 2 lety +44

      Paid off? How are most people supposed to get a home in the 1st place? The median home price is $440k and if you are talking most safe areas it's $600k+. The median individual income is $40k a year. If I was born in 1940 I'd have 10 houses by now. Instead I rent a room.

    • @niciassmith1204
      @niciassmith1204 Před 2 lety +9

      @@MRGior-wo6dk By my estimate if SS is not going to be there you need a paid off house and probably $2 million and even then you may still need to work half the year

    • @IndieInFilms
      @IndieInFilms Před 2 lety +10

      If there is any - ANY illness at all, add hundreds of thousands of dollars to what is needed.

    • @markjohnson1460
      @markjohnson1460 Před 2 lety +1

      100% true and as a wholesaler in Colorado I can tell you there is a difference between those that own and don't when we call them be the people who go oh I want to hear about cheap properties not wait I only rent

    • @tktimber418
      @tktimber418 Před 2 lety

      @@MRGior-wo6dk SS is already insolvent. The government covers it up by printing currency.

  • @sanchezbennett2419
    @sanchezbennett2419 Před rokem +114

    I'm 48years old living in California, I'm hoping to retire at 50 if things keep going well for me. Bought my first house last month and I can't be more proud that am i now. I'm glad I made great decision about my finances that changed me forever but now I can't seem to make any other smart investment.

    • @laylariley9350
      @laylariley9350 Před rokem +9

      The first step to successful investing is figuring out your goals and risk tolerance either on your own or with the help of a financial professional but is very advisable you make use of a professional like I did. If you get the facts about saving and investing and follow through with an intelligent plan, you should be able to gain financial security over the years and enjoy the benefits of managing your money.

    • @patriciamary9934
      @patriciamary9934 Před rokem +9

      I'm a living testimony of expert Naomi, she has been trading for me for months now

    • @colemanjeans5275
      @colemanjeans5275 Před rokem +8

      Wow I know Mrs Naomi and I have also been trading with her, She's such an amazing woman with good skills and keeps me happy all week knowing I earn 15thousand extra income weely trading with her.

    • @evelynabigail1507
      @evelynabigail1507 Před rokem +8

      yeah she does , and in my opinion, it's a huge one and chance for you to change your life with trading.. I just bought my dream Mercedes from last week's profit. All thanks to her expertise.

    • @gavinconnor3079
      @gavinconnor3079 Před rokem +6

      After I got 300K trading with Mrs Naomi. I bought a new House and I'm now able to send my kids to a better school in the states thanks to mrs Naomi's trades. When someone is straight forward with what he or she is doing people will always speak up for them.

  • @paulginsberg6942
    @paulginsberg6942 Před 2 lety +101

    We are in the process of our standard of living collapsing to its true level. It's debt and credit that has camouflaged this reality.

    • @ricf9592
      @ricf9592 Před 2 lety +19

      Indeed. It's the brutal reality. Vast numbers of people have spent decades being able to pretend they were far less poor than they really were.

    • @naddarr1
      @naddarr1 Před 2 lety +18

      Absolutely. We've never really recovered from the 2008 crash and our society doesn't want to admit that. Luckily a lot of young people have vastly different spending habits then previous generations. Hopefully we as a society will no longer desire more and bigger and by proxy no long look at the ultra wealthy with rose colored glasses. Either way the whole world is about to finally see just how broke the U.S. citizen really is. People in this nation are not just complaining anymore we really are taking massive steps back in living standards.

    • @tomasr.533
      @tomasr.533 Před rokem +7

      @@naddarr1 It's true, many people live beyond their means. Trying to show off with fancy cars, clothes, houses... going to expensive sporting events, wasting time and money watching TV or cruising the internet for hours and hours while not improving themselves to make themselves more valuable in the job market.

    • @g.t.richardson6311
      @g.t.richardson6311 Před rokem +3

      @@ricf9592 very true
      And those of us who didn’t? What of us ?

  • @alexisye
    @alexisye Před 2 lety +44

    The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The next best time is right now. This is great advice, and no, it's not too late to start.

  • @billkallas1762
    @billkallas1762 Před 2 lety +56

    I won the retirement game. In order to win, you need two things. Zero debt, and a Trust to keep Big Brother out of your pockets.

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 Před rokem +1

      Do you don't pay your taxes huh?

    • @billkallas1762
      @billkallas1762 Před rokem +3

      @@nosuchthing8 I'm not running for office.

    • @duancoviero9759
      @duancoviero9759 Před rokem +3

      Also have to have health God like wealth. You get Diabetes, cancer, or other high cost medical situation you can forget about saving for retirement.

    • @billkallas1762
      @billkallas1762 Před rokem +6

      @@duancoviero9759 If you have good insurance, you don't have to worry. A few years ago, my wife incurred a $60,000 Hospital Bill. I ended up shelling out about $125.00. Everything else was covered. Another example was that two months ago, she had a $925 ER Bill. It cost me $15.

    • @alfx5432
      @alfx5432 Před rokem +6

      Zero debt is a good start

  • @MargaretSchwerdtmann
    @MargaretSchwerdtmann Před rokem +407

    To my understanding this just proves how much we need an edge as investors because playing the market like everyone else just isn’t good enough. I've been quite unsure about investing in this current market and at the same time I feel it's the best time to get started on the market, what are your thoughts?

    • @williamsbrown4026
      @williamsbrown4026 Před rokem

      Most experts agree that index funds are very good investments for long-term investors. They are low-cost options for obtaining a well-diversified portfolio that passively tracks an index. Be sure to compare different index funds or ETFs to be sure you are tracking the best index for your goals and at the lowest cost.

    • @KelvinWallace
      @KelvinWallace Před rokem

      Love the breakdown. I've gradually built my finance and made my first $100k through investing which i've used to start my jewellery business, and with what I’ve learned over a decade investing, given enough time, solid investments have the potential to double the initial principal amount, but many investors are instead attracted to the lure of high yields in short periods of time despite the possibility of unattractive losses before even getting out. So the onus is on newbies to beware. Having multiple income streams helped me stay afloat in business when the pandemic broke out.

    • @Karagoldberg7
      @Karagoldberg7 Před rokem

      @@KelvinWallace What ways would you recommend to someone who has no experience whatsoever and looking to make some income through investing?

    • @KelvinWallace
      @KelvinWallace Před rokem

      @@Karagoldberg7 Get yourself a stock advisor and set goals you can live with and stick to them. Don't be too concerned about how much they charge; it's usually the industry standard. I had a couple of false starts, but ultimately ended up with a local ANITA JO LYNCH, advisor who gave me investment advice that was sound and with steady growth; underline steady. Be the turtle, not the rabbit. My point is that these big outfits have information that you will not have as a private investor. Don't be discouraged by down turns and what the media is saying. If the media is talking about it, then it has already happened. Be on a team and you will be fine. Good luck my friend and hope this helps.

    • @UshnicYuvnikof
      @UshnicYuvnikof Před rokem

      @@KelvinWallace how can one find a Resourceful FA, I buy the idea of employing their services, its a shame market crashes as of late have become a sort of habit for stocks

  • @thesilentgeneration
    @thesilentgeneration Před rokem +52

    In retirement now, one cannot expect to have the same standard of living as they did before they retired. I had to retire when I was 58 in 2003 and had no savings but what I could scrap up for a year. But there are ways to get around this. In my case, I left the US and moved to the Philippines, where I live in modest luxury on a pension that would be considered below the poverty rate in the US. Yes, there is some adjustment, but it is well worth it.

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 Před rokem +5

      Yeah, I might do that

    • @zokitchvlog
      @zokitchvlog Před rokem +2

      Great moved✅

    • @questioneverything594
      @questioneverything594 Před rokem +3

      Good for you my man. Nice move! Just wondering if you married over there?

    • @danielsnook5029
      @danielsnook5029 Před rokem +3

      I wish you many 'happy endings' in PI!!😆

    • @BigTroubleD
      @BigTroubleD Před rokem +3

      Well who knows what being able to move overseas is going to be like 20-30 years from now…

  • @Eleuthero5
    @Eleuthero5 Před rokem +39

    Excellent video, Adam. I was a college professor and retired at 59 because of saving and investment. I'm now 70 and even if the California Teachers Retirement System collapses, I will be okay. The numbers you presented are incredibly scary but well presented. Better that people be scared now than when they're 75 and totally out of money. Good job!!

  • @brantrichardson1949
    @brantrichardson1949 Před 2 lety +57

    I'm 50 now. I feel like I have spent my entire life sacrificing for the future. It has put me in a much better place than average for retirement but I still don't feel like I can let up and enjoy spending a little.

    • @Wealthion
      @Wealthion  Před 2 lety +9

      You sound just like me

    • @TT-jg8ju
      @TT-jg8ju Před 2 lety +8

      I assumed most boomers who had a house have a 6 figure retirement. Ur article is sayin most dont even have a 10k???

    • @GrandChessboard
      @GrandChessboard Před 2 lety +7

      @@notgunnadoit7461 Leave the country, there are plenty of nice places that are cheaper to live. If you get all your money from the government then you need to take a trip out of the country and see...

    • @johnbirman5840
      @johnbirman5840 Před 2 lety +12

      @@TT-jg8ju
      No mate. As a Head chef for 40+ years - I never earned in the USA more than 54,000. My mm put down 1500 and found a cheap semi house (37500) and co-signed back in 1976 - 10.5% interest. I sold a year and a half later for 65,000. I was 19 making $100 a week as an apprentice. Got married, moved to a cheaper state, bought another house at 7.5%. Moved to USA at 23 with 52,000 cash. And bought a cheap house w/land for $52,000.
      At 52, took a non military contracting job in Iraq 2008-2011 w/ Defense Dept. Did whatever they wanted: Food service/Ice plant/Air Ops/Logistics. Went to Africa for 2 years. I worked 7 days a week, 12 hrs a day. 1st year didn’t have a day off. All tax free (or close to)
      Retired this year at 62. I gave up over 5 years of my life to do this. My last year’s work: 54,000. My wife stopped working 12 years ago, but never made more than $10,000 as a teacher in a Catholic school.
      Long story - and who cares.
      But even if you don’t earn a lot, you can make it if you look for opportunities and take em when they come, and don’t expect a regular job to pay.

    • @TT-jg8ju
      @TT-jg8ju Před 2 lety

      @@johnbirman5840 so u have a retirment 6 figures?

  • @acajudi100
    @acajudi100 Před rokem +9

    I am 80 and I had to leave the USA at 79 to Queretaro for a safer and less expensive city. I live on SS and a small pension, and a small savings.
    It was $1870 per month to live in the dangerous USA, and it is $725 per month to live in Queretaro.
    I do speak Spanish as a second language and have been visiting and living in Acapulco for over 60 years.
    Everything kept going up in the USA and I was not safe, but trust me, I can defend myself,
    We reap what we sow, and Karma never loses an address
    . Send all criminals to horrible prisons around the world with shave heads
    Stop stealing our money, and put Americans first. Seniors are helping the young people.
    Move to a safe inexpensive country of your choice, if you can work online, or on a pension.

  • @sewnsew6770
    @sewnsew6770 Před 2 lety +11

    Healthcare costs in America and no universal healthcare make saving for retirement very difficult. And social security provides poverty pensions. Medicare only covers part of retirement healthcare costs. Also once over 55 are a layoff target

  • @dougl945
    @dougl945 Před rokem +3

    My dad and mom retired with a million dollars. I can’t even save $100 month.
    It’s frustrating.

    • @DrSchor
      @DrSchor Před rokem

      How much you save is all up to you. Improve you rskills, to make more, and cut out silly expenses.

  • @desimo147
    @desimo147 Před 2 lety +9

    All these companies selling $100,000 electric vehicles have waiting lists of months to years for their vehicles. Car companies have stopped selling economy cars because nobody will buy them. But, $65,000 pickup trucks are all over the road. Restaurants are packed and trips out of town are frequent. Garages don't hold cars anymore and they can't build storage units fast enough to house all the junk that people are constantly buying. The Amazon trucks stop by every single week, if not 2 or 3 times a week. The idea of cutting your own grass or painting your own house is a foreign concept to most Americans these days. Young people bypass the starter homes and condos of the past and go for the $500,000 house right off the bat. And all this is the behavior of the upper middle class! If they are broke, you know everyone else is too.

    • @bugsbunny2357
      @bugsbunny2357 Před rokem +1

      All brought to you by near 0% interest rates.

  • @matt75hooper
    @matt75hooper Před 2 lety +7

    Boomers- You want some serious retirement peace ? I simply decided I have no plans to retire. I will keep working and do what I've always done- take care of my family. I wont file for Soc Sec until 70. The income years from 62 to 70 are usually good earning years. So I've concentrated on staying healthy and enjoying my work. Really enjoying any time off I take with wife & family. Retirement is a very new concept. Retirement at 62 is ridiculously young unless you're a lifelong govt hack with a yummie gummy juicy pension. I tell you in all honesty making the decision to not retire has given me great peace. I am a man and the head of my family. It's the proper thing to do & I feel proud as hell over this decision.

    • @bugsbunny2357
      @bugsbunny2357 Před rokem +1

      I could not agree more. Take the pressure off yourself by setting yourself up so that you can work until 68-70. Thus we do not have to fund so many years of retirement. Why quit when you have worked yourself into a position of making the most money you have ever made?

    • @matt75hooper
      @matt75hooper Před rokem

      @@bugsbunny2357 You nailed it. 👏 I am in my 60s super healthy & love my work. Added bonus is living in a resort area so any time off is like vacation without the travel hassle.
      Those retiring at 62 ? Warning. That is a lot of hours to fill every day.

  • @nvarras7
    @nvarras7 Před rokem +11

    I came back to the us 3 years ago broke and in debt to another country after Greece’s economic crisis. It is amazing that I already paid off all my debt and have 70000 in retirement savings. This country is amazing if you learn how to save. Going broke taught me how to respect every dollar I make.

    • @questioneverything594
      @questioneverything594 Před rokem

      Great story my man!! Congrats. What course did you follow to pay everything off and be able to save so much pretty quickly?

    • @hermanrogers1325
      @hermanrogers1325 Před rokem +1

      Well done, hard headed people will never listen to you they spend everything they get

    • @nvarras7
      @nvarras7 Před rokem +1

      @@questioneverything594 I was lucky and had enough in savings (8000) to start a small business and worked 7 days a week 15 hours a day and now earn as much as i can work. Every penny went to the business or my debt. I lived with relatives for 9 months. The cost of living in Greece is very low so I was (still am) supporting my wife and daughter with 1100 dollars a month. I still invest or save 50 percent of my income and max out my deductions. I still work insane hours as I wait for immigration to ok my wife after 2 years. ( 3 years, if you count the year covid shut down immigration ) I'd rather work those hours than watch tv, and I don't go out much. My only hobbies are stock investing and running until my family can join me.

    • @questioneverything594
      @questioneverything594 Před rokem +2

      @@nvarras7 Sir, you are a very impressive gentleman. I have absolute respect for what you've done and are doing. My hat is off to you. You have proven once again that there are really no shortcuts for most people. The "secret" is working and saving. Good luck ti you and your family, nd I hope you will be successfully reunited soon!

    • @nvarras7
      @nvarras7 Před rokem +1

      @@questioneverything594 Thank you, I hope they are here soon also. I had to learn the hard way about working and saving. When you are younger you think you have all the time in the world but it passes quickly.

  • @greybeardbass
    @greybeardbass Před rokem +28

    My dad's failure to plan for retirement caused me to get financially educated. I was well on track to becoming my dad and thanks to education channels like this I've built my own income fund in a self-managed IRA. I won't be jet-setting, but no debt and reliable income will keep the lights on and food in the pantry. On track for a good retirement 5 years (or less) from now. I need to get that long-term disability insurance figured out that you mentioned though.

    • @sactopyrshep
      @sactopyrshep Před rokem +2

      I have decided, after weighing the pros and cons, the best long-term health/disability insurance is taking good care of yourself. Congratulations on figuring out a good retirement plan.

    • @Frank020
      @Frank020 Před rokem

      Necessity is the mother of invention.

  • @dachicagoan8185
    @dachicagoan8185 Před rokem +20

    When I started my career, I noticed many coworkers that were working in their 60s, and they would tell me they wished they had invested decades earlier and also wished they weren't still paying their mortgages. Seeing this, i took it upon myself to read several personal finance books and begin investing as soon as I could (after saving for a home down payment). For the last 5 years, I really stepped it up and have since paid off my house, and I'm maxing both 401k, HSA, and Roth IRA.

    • @NeoAndersonReloaded
      @NeoAndersonReloaded Před rokem

      Hope its there then

    • @susanneschmidt6159
      @susanneschmidt6159 Před rokem

      I have a paid off mortgage and a decent amount of savings ...but....inflation and living in NJ...and I'll be working til 65 like most others

    • @scinusa
      @scinusa Před rokem

      @@susanneschmidt6159 If old slow, you know, Joe buys enough votes to be reinstalled your savings will be inflated away..

  • @sactopyrshep
    @sactopyrshep Před rokem +6

    I read many retirement-focused YT channels. Of the hundreds of videos I’ve watched over the years this is in the top five rankings for educating people as to how we got here.
    Thanks for a frank and succinct outline of the current disastrous situation. I am in the top 10% because I worked for 46 years at a large California medical center that offered membership in a well-run union.
    I retired at 70 with a hefty Social Security check and a comfortable pension.
    I also have a 403B account which I was able to fully fund due to the excellent wage scale negotiated by my union.
    In addition to the points you so eloquently made, the loss of unions has severely impacted workers in this country.
    Without unions, workers are at the mercy of the corporation. I wish future retirees good luck. No one should have to live in poverty after they retire from decades of loyal employment.
    I subscribed to your channel and look forward to future thoughtful and well-researched videos.

  • @ats89117
    @ats89117 Před 2 lety +50

    I have done pretty well preparing for retirement, but I am very concerned about the government confiscating my retirement savings...

    • @bobz4968
      @bobz4968 Před 2 lety

      You need to find alternative news outlets like Real America News. You will find much more hopeful and honest reporting. The Democrats and globalists are fighting for their survival as Americans rise up! You won’t read or view this in legacy mainstream news media

    • @ats89117
      @ats89117 Před 2 lety +15

      @Joseph Lucas Because they can. Redistributing wealth will always be a politically popular message given the small percentage of people saving for retirement...

    • @theoldguy9329
      @theoldguy9329 Před 2 lety +3

      There were proposals about 12 years ago to require all personal savings vehicles ro bec100% invested in US government paper (including repatriating funds). Not quite confiscation in words, but in deed.... It did not happen that time.

    • @vex6559
      @vex6559 Před 2 lety +4

      @Joseph Lucas they have ways. Below the mention of forced treasuries, which they're doing with pensions as well, but they also have a codified way of quietly swapping 401k into treasuries as needed and this isn't taking into account the potential for outright public confiscation, which is VERY possible and likely if everything completely goes to hell.

    • @theoldguy9329
      @theoldguy9329 Před 2 lety +1

      @Joseph Lucas Not so sure. They keep the control, and keep it close. The outside of the US USD market getting funded by exporting USD, that a World Reserve currency requires, can have quite a snap back

  • @christinab2074
    @christinab2074 Před 2 lety +34

    I had to do this for an elderly family member. She never expected to live into her mid 90’s and did just fine living extremely conservatively on her compound interest until The Fed screwed her 😔

    • @Wealthion
      @Wealthion  Před 2 lety +29

      Yes. IMO it's not nearly discussed enough how the Fed's ZIRP was a direct war on seniors who planned their whole lives to retire on a fixed income. Massive betrayal of the social contract.

    • @christinab2074
      @christinab2074 Před 2 lety +10

      @@Wealthion Absolutely. All the while, illegals and their families received more benefits as well. So much for disrespect towards The Greatest Generation WWII Veterans and their widows 😞

    • @eileenmcgovern9193
      @eileenmcgovern9193 Před 2 lety +8

      @@christinab2074 actually it is the children of the greatest generation who are retiring now

    • @jet4415
      @jet4415 Před 2 lety +3

      @@eileenmcgovern9193 yes that is correct: my dad fought in WW ll, I am 68, and just retired.

    • @HidingFromFate
      @HidingFromFate Před 2 lety +7

      @@christinab2074 Care to point me in the direction of some documentation for this?: "all the while, illegals and their families received more benefits as well". Not saying you're right or wrong, just looking for verification.

  • @hermanrogers1325
    @hermanrogers1325 Před rokem +7

    I payed off my mortgage loan and credit card debt and driving a 8 year old car and happily retired for the past 4 years and I don’t need to travel all over the place spending money and I been saving all my mortgage payments and avoiding debt like a drunken banker

  • @casienwhey
    @casienwhey Před 2 lety +31

    If you saved nothing for retirement, you are trusting your financial future to a government that has saved nothing for its future financial obligations.

  • @Jbookman1111
    @Jbookman1111 Před 2 lety +26

    Your prep-work, genuine concern, and compassion shine bright in this video. Thanks, Adam.

  • @massonh7476
    @massonh7476 Před 2 lety +13

    Wealthion viewers didn’t like the Kiyosaki interview.
    The obvious conclusion: Wealthion viewers are in general economically much better educated than the viewers of most other CZcams channels.

    • @tonymanos9500
      @tonymanos9500 Před 2 lety +4

      Robert doesn't keep his wheels on the road. It's hard for him to stay in a lane.

    • @massonh7476
      @massonh7476 Před 2 lety +3

      @@tonymanos9500 Adam and Robert are friends from the past. Adam is a real gentleman. He really tried hard, but it was a mission impossible.

  • @mikemadison7410
    @mikemadison7410 Před 2 lety +142

    Excellent presentation--thank you! I am 75 and still work full time, as does my wife. I enjoy my work (farming) and plan to stay at until I drop dead in the field with a hoe in my hand. With no debts, my trickle of social security income is more than adequate.

    • @medusaminiatures4006
      @medusaminiatures4006 Před 2 lety +22

      Nice! As an artist my plan is to drop dead at the drawing table :)

    • @chessdad182
      @chessdad182 Před 2 lety +3

      I grew up on a farm. The current generation of farmers are mainly 4x4s.

    • @questioneverything594
      @questioneverything594 Před rokem +3

      Great story. Thanks for sharing this. Sounds like a great life and great living philosophy.

    • @vivi44
      @vivi44 Před rokem +1

      You should leave the country and go somewhere like South East Asia, where that trickle is a middle class income and that farm not only supports you but makes you a lot more money.

    • @questioneverything594
      @questioneverything594 Před rokem +1

      @@vivi44 Wow. You think that's actually possible sir? I'm on my way if it is!!

  • @mattl1811
    @mattl1811 Před rokem +3

    I just don't see how it's possible anymore. I make double the national average of income, budget all the time, and live a very average life. And I have nearly nothing for retirement. My best hope is to stay healthy and keep working, or retire in Panama or the Philippines where I can stretch a dollar far.

  • @hotrodbob.
    @hotrodbob. Před rokem +6

    I was an electrician for 46.years, I retired at 67 for health reasons, and couldn't have done that if I hadn't been a Union member for the last 16 years of my career. The years previously I was not union, nonunion does not pay enough to have anything left over to put into any kind of retirement account, I w was just able to keep a door over our heads and food on our table. If I had been given the opportunity to join a Local Union at the beginning of my career I would be comfortably retired today. Your plan is great but there are a lot of people that don't have an extra 20$ to put away.

    • @hotrodbob.
      @hotrodbob. Před rokem

      I'm still going to have to get a part time job to make up the amount that I am short every month, very few people can make it every month on just social security.

  • @Offon_A_Boondoggle
    @Offon_A_Boondoggle Před 2 lety +29

    Great news Adam. I am one of the 49% having lost everything in 2008-9 and never fully recovered. I am fortunate that my SS is double the average but even with that I spend most of my time out of the US in countries I can live much better on with the little I have.

    • @Fedgery007
      @Fedgery007 Před 2 lety +4

      How did you lose everything?!

    • @TheDustinPeterson
      @TheDustinPeterson Před 2 lety +5

      Only people who get hurt are the people who sold the bottom. Make sure you leave you retirement alone for the next recession. Tough lesson to learn

    • @secretariatgirl4249
      @secretariatgirl4249 Před 2 lety +8

      See that you travel around...I'm "investing" in dual citizenship so I can have a permanent place to land or a choice in Europe. I just have no interest in Mexico even though I'm 50 miles away...or Panama, etc. I'm 71+ and may not make it, but I'm not dead yet so I'm giving it a shot! One big last adventure, why rot here in this sinking country...my soul can't take it anymore.

    • @francisbrewster4948
      @francisbrewster4948 Před rokem +2

      When we are older ....very old
      Health problems ..... its usually best to be at home in yr native country, not somewhere overseas, ...can you suppport yourself if you are unconscious

    • @anne9358
      @anne9358 Před rokem +3

      @@francisbrewster4948 Very true and good advice. 👍

  • @abergin
    @abergin Před 2 lety +41

    This was an excellent discussion of the retirement dilemma many older Americans find themselves in. Unfortunately, although many expect the government to come riding to the rescue, that is unlikely because the problem is too large for even the government to solve. The 401k trap was doomed to fail because too many employees opted not to participate. It was great for the employers, but not for the majority of the employees.

    • @timothyw7663
      @timothyw7663 Před 2 lety +17

      With ever increasing 'defense' budgets, and with nothing to show for them, I propose diverting at least 1/3 of those funds (probably around $333B/year) to refund social security and Medicare.

    • @elmateo77
      @elmateo77 Před 2 lety

      Calling it a "trap" is a bit ridiculous though. All you had to do is put 10% of your income into a 401k (set up the automatic deduction then never touch it again) and you'd be set for retirement. Most people just have so little self control they couldn't even handle that without the government or employer doing it for them, tbh it's kind of pathetic. It's like a hole in the ground with dozens of giant flashing neon signs saying "Warning" all over it and people just walk into it anyways because going around would take too much effort...

    • @OroborusFMA
      @OroborusFMA Před rokem

      Volunteerism, which is marketed as "choice" is in fact no choice at all. It is a recipe for dysfunction.

    • @wyatt1153
      @wyatt1153 Před rokem

      Lift the Social Security wealthy tax cap. They've been getting away with murder not paying after$147,000!

    • @g.t.richardson6311
      @g.t.richardson6311 Před rokem +1

      @@timothyw7663 the defense budget has become less and less a percentage of the total federal budget for quite sometime
      SS and Medicare obligations are far more percent

  • @kesayo
    @kesayo Před rokem +6

    I can retire at any time, as long as I don't plan to live more than a year or two afterwards.

  • @waitingforrealitytosetin4807

    Private pensions are one thing, the company not taxpayers fund it. Public pensions are another thing all together. Far too often taxpayers are left in the dark over contract negotiations by politicians with the public unions that had a large part in electing them. What could go wrong? Pensions and other benefits that the private sector can only dreams of to name a few. Besides being unsustainable. No public employee should make more than 50% or less of their top base salary along with paid health care for life. The number of public employees with 6 figure pensions is staggering, often which is more than their working base salary.

    • @JJ-mh3hb
      @JJ-mh3hb Před 2 lety +2

      Gotta join the club and quit the jealousy I guess?

    • @waitingforrealitytosetin4807
      @waitingforrealitytosetin4807 Před 2 lety +6

      @@JJ-mh3hb Not a matter of jealousy. As a private sector taxpayer I shouldn't have to be paying for benefits that are way out of line with private sector benefits especially with the general level of performance/results many public sector employees provide. Public schools in most cases provide a perfect example of this.

    • @jet4415
      @jet4415 Před 2 lety +1

      @@waitingforrealitytosetin4807 i live with a retired teacher. They certainly earned every penny of their state retirement. If you include the SS check, it can take care of a no frills lifestyle. State retirement comes close to 50% of their wage but 50% of nothing is nothing.

    • @ld4122
      @ld4122 Před 2 lety +2

      Well that’s 50% more than non pension, hard working tax payers are getting.

    • @jet4415
      @jet4415 Před 2 lety

      @@ld4122 They are supposed to use the saving/retirement vehicles that were set up by the government. Public employees cannot use those. Just because people don’t plan their retirement don’t blame public workers.

  • @orangenote3325
    @orangenote3325 Před 2 lety +7

    Early retirement is the dream. I refuse to accept that I have to be at the end of my life to enjoy time freedom. Let's hustle to financial independence!
    Being able to work because you WANT to, and not because you HAVE makes all the difference!

    • @JerryStevens
      @JerryStevens Před 2 lety +1

      Early retirement is fine if that's what you want to do and have enough saved. I've grown tired of my friends who retired early and keep complaining about how tight things are.

  • @mikepetro695
    @mikepetro695 Před 2 lety +7

    Even if you have your house paid off, in some areas you will still have to have tens of thousands of dollars to pay the property taxes, water, and sewer bills. If you do not have family around, you will have to sell you house once you get sick enough that you are not able to take care of yourself unless you have about 2 million in the bank. Home care is incredibly expensive and most people have to go into a nursing home.

    • @bugsbunny2357
      @bugsbunny2357 Před rokem +1

      About 25% of seniors will end up in a nursing home at some point. Only 5% of seniors are in nursing homes at any given time. That means Most / 75% are not in nursing homes.

    • @jeffc1347
      @jeffc1347 Před rokem +1

      While you are correct homes are expensive, its not like you don't have to pay property tax/utilities/repairs if you are renting. As far as I know most landlords aren't in it to run a charity. Having a paid off home in retirement is certainly preferrable to renting or having a mortgage unless you haven't kept up with the maintenance and let the home fall apart.

  • @loneranger7573
    @loneranger7573 Před 2 lety +3

    I did retire in 2014...cant afford to stay with pensions, I am working full time again, but after Covid boredom, I am happy about it!!!

  • @nicolosito
    @nicolosito Před rokem +1

    The risk that social security payments could be eliminated or even reduced in 13 years is NILL. In Germany, social security funds are no longer sufficient to ensure payments but the difference has simply been made up from tax receipts and that is obviously what would happen in the US. No politician would ever dare reduce social security benefits.

  • @georgekane1985
    @georgekane1985 Před rokem +15

    “Nomadland” by Jessica Bruder is a book/audiobook about seniors who basically live in their vehicles and work seasonally at places like Amazon during the Christmas season, and the sugar beat harvest in the fall, and campground host in the summer. It is an amazing story and I recommend it to everyone, especially those who might be facing a similar situation. It is a story that stresses the camaraderie and tenacity of this senior group of Americans. I have listened to the Audiobook a few times now, because it is such a poignant and contemporary story. It is clear that in situations like this, group energy is needed!

    • @3John-Bishop
      @3John-Bishop Před rokem +1

      I saw the movie

    • @magnuspym
      @magnuspym Před rokem +2

      It is a Powerful movie. Frances Mcdormund is a fantastic "actor" (I guess "actress" has fallen out of common usage).

    • @feliciasampson8032
      @feliciasampson8032 Před rokem

      I could possibly go the Nomadland route if I could skip the desert and move to the Pacific Northwest...or abroad.

    • @dachicagoan8185
      @dachicagoan8185 Před rokem +1

      What a sad existence. I could never have that kind of lifestyle. That's why I grow ever more serious about saving & investing.

    • @feliciasampson8032
      @feliciasampson8032 Před rokem

      Frances McDormand was her usual amazing self in Nomadland, with her nuanced portrayal. I never felt pity, just admiration for her strength and tenacity. If people can make this off-the-grid lifestyle work for them, I think it can be an alternative filled with camaraderie and adventure.

  • @stevemcleod4608
    @stevemcleod4608 Před 2 lety +6

    Not sure if this is a good thing, but for those of us that have saved and invested well, we leave our children a nice step up in life with a nice inheritance. It is important for me to leave my children a nice inheritance and I may not have saved much if I were receiving a pension as I would not have needed to save so much.

  • @johncantrell8873
    @johncantrell8873 Před rokem +37

    I worked 50 years and retired at age 63. I planned, budgeted, saved and worked extra part-time during 20 years of working life. Still felt moderately prepared for retiremen. Soon I will be 67 years old and seeing that pension, social security and retirement savings are not keeping up with current costs. WHO knew covid could impact so much so fast? I am considering returning to the work force part-time, thinking it is a shame the economy may require more than a 50 year work history after all that planing, sacrificing and saving. I feel sorry for those who had fewer options.

    • @agates9383
      @agates9383 Před rokem

      Covid is being used as a cover, the country never recovered from the 08-09 crash, we just papered over it and now, it appears, that the "papering" is finally coming home to roost and we will be resuming the 08-09 crash but this time in a worse condition than we were in 08-09 - the FED's "pony" trick has been played and now they have painted themselves and US into a corner that there is no painless way out of.

    • @jdenino6022
      @jdenino6022 Před rokem +3

      I told my husband not to retire until he’s 65 or 66. He does get a pension from his previous career but it’s not that much money annually. At least the house is paid off.

    • @agates9383
      @agates9383 Před rokem +1

      @@jdenino6022 Might want to buy some gold and silver if you don't have any.

    • @autobotdiva9268
      @autobotdiva9268 Před rokem +2

      Wow. You worked way too long.

    • @mrs.jack-string2420
      @mrs.jack-string2420 Před rokem +1

      Now here's a person who did it "right" and is still thinking about having to return to work. The costs if things in this country are OUT OF CONTROL. I'm not down on Capitalism, but the USA is going to have to do better at having their citizens being able to take care of themselves. Medicine, insurance, college, to name a few, all are overpriced! Cut bona-fide welfare, not Medicare, but welfare that pays women for having babies with no husband. If you don't work, nor have a decent work history, you don't get rewarded, you get the bare minimum until you understand, you need to work. 💯

  • @sues3218
    @sues3218 Před 2 lety +16

    When there is such a gap between wages and the cost of EVERYTHING, it is not a surprise that people can't save. We are being overtaxed on everything.

    • @secretariatgirl4249
      @secretariatgirl4249 Před 2 lety +2

      This country has never committed to true social welfare and is splitting at the seams because of it...And, it is on track to do worse...ask Rick Scott what his crowd has in store re: taxes for the little guy...again,

    • @clrodrick
      @clrodrick Před 2 lety +1

      I just recently read where 60%+ of folks are living paycheck to paycheck right now, and the longer this stagflationary environment persists that % will keep rising!

  • @samg2620
    @samg2620 Před rokem +4

    Agree with much of this, disagree with some. Anyone can be financially secure if they make good decisions, especially in their 20’s and 30’s. Save early, let time turn your investments into a nest egg that will eliminate worries. You have to take personal responsibility.

    • @randomyoutuber308
      @randomyoutuber308 Před rokem +2

      Exactly...people saying 401ks don't work are the people who job hop every 5-10 years and empty their 401k out each time to buy a boat or a luxury car. My company did away with pensions about 15 years ago and everyone not grandfathered into the pension plan starts off at a 10% 401k match. They're putting a little over 1k per month into my 401k for me. If I'm there 30 years just the match portion, if compound at an average rate of 7% per year, will be over 1 million. People pulling pensions are only pulling about 30-50k per year fixed. The million spread out in some dividend paying stocks/funds easily pays you what the pension would, with the benefit of dividends tend to go up over time while the pension is fixed.
      Like you said though...you have to take personally responsibility. If you manage your investments well the 401k can very easily be better than most pensions...but most people can't manage their money.

  • @jonathanlee5185
    @jonathanlee5185 Před 2 lety +43

    An excellent explainer. No criticism from me, but here is something to consider: our modern obsession with retirement is missing something ~ why not aspire to keep working part-time, serving others and dying in harness as an active person (if possible).

    • @PhoenixCrown
      @PhoenixCrown Před 2 lety +8

      Yes a great point. The concept of retirement makes sense from the stance that as we get older, we get less... able. Especially when everyone was farming, I mean my grandpa was out in the fields until he died, but he moved a lot slower by the end. So it makes sense in the same way that babies don't work.
      However, I think it also stems from a culture that hates work. Corporate America and our system of taxation, unsound money, and all the shit has led to insane inequality where many people work 3 jobs to put food on the table. And they're shitty jobs. And they don't pay well obviously. (Should someone cleaning the sewer really make less than some guy in a suit regurgitating stuff he read in a textbook...?) This hatred for work, clock-watching, job-jumping etc. leads people to want to "retire early."
      I think the best life is one with work that is fulfilling and productive, work that I'm good at and maybe even enjoy, and then I don't feel the need to retire, maybe just work a little less.

    • @cautiousoptimist1926
      @cautiousoptimist1926 Před 2 lety +6

      Part time work and job sharing are options that should have been discussed prior to the boomers reaching retirement age. There are many of us who could have continued working if fewer days and hours were a possibility, but in many circumstances this is simply not an option.
      Additionally, people may be living longer but that doesn't mean that their productive years have been extended. Especially true for those people who perform physical labor.
      And many people have worked in jobs where they were overworked, unappreciated and poorly compensated so I don't see them aspiring to dying in the harness.

    • @mr.financial
      @mr.financial Před 2 lety +8

      I agree with that @Jonathan Lee . I am more about FI, financial freedom than retiring. Doing nothing leads to depression, poor health and so many other things. Of course, no one wants to be working 40 to 60 hours a week at 65 especially if it is a physical job.

    • @TexasRiverRat31254
      @TexasRiverRat31254 Před 2 lety +2

      @Jonathan Lee Please feel free to "die in harness", it's your choice. I stay plenty busy on my free and clear 3.5 acres in the TX woods in the morning and then take the afternoon off. I earned the right to relax after a life of building and maintaining power generation, chip fabrication facilities and other infrastructure that people take for granted. Retired with 2 privately funded union pensions and social security. Not wealthy but I do well by living a sensible lifestyle. Help the neighbors by welding broken equipment and they give me as many eggs as I can eat. Too many people live off the efforts of others and complain when they cant maintain their luxurious lifestyle in retirement. Let them keep "working" and die in harness.

    • @markkuklis1249
      @markkuklis1249 Před 2 lety

      I'm working on being able to retire in about 2 years but not sure. I'm thinking of going to all cash in my 401k for awhile and since I think the market will keep falling hold onto my leveraged inverse volatility ETF which should go up. Also maybe work PT at my job and be semi-retired.

  • @maxw576
    @maxw576 Před 2 lety +32

    My parents didn't save. They worked into thier 80's and never complained. In fact said working helped them mentally and physically. I have a hard time worrying about people who made bad choices their whole life. I know there are people who truely need help, but I've seen many people drive new cars and buy expensive clothes and homes. I took a lot of jokes about my rust bucket cars that I fixed for 40 years. I never made top 10%, but close. Now I supposedly need to be compassionate towards those that made bad choices. 🙄

    • @bellmattwebb
      @bellmattwebb Před 2 lety +8

      It will depend on how many people that have made bad choices. If the mob is large enough, it will get its way if it's the right thing to do or not.

    • @thomasboutin6045
      @thomasboutin6045 Před rokem

      :)

    • @Gigi30107
      @Gigi30107 Před rokem +3

      Still driving my 79. Thugs hit the lot at work. Watched them pilfer all the other guys expensive trucks filled with goodies. Never touched my beater👍

    • @jdenino6022
      @jdenino6022 Před rokem +1

      @@Gigi30107 you drive a 1979 car?

    • @Gigi30107
      @Gigi30107 Před rokem

      @@jdenino6022 yup

  • @boyter8
    @boyter8 Před 2 lety +7

    No-nonsense, straight-forward. Loved this video.

  • @carefulconsumer8682
    @carefulconsumer8682 Před rokem +15

    One of your best videos. Despite the dire circumstances, it's odd DC politicians still hand foreign nations like Ukraine nearly $100 Billion while Americans face disaster. Can you discuss or have a guess discuss various Medigap insurance plans? Thanks for giving all your tips on how to prepare.

    • @smokelord2002
      @smokelord2002 Před rokem

      When does the govt hand money to us? When they did all the right wingers (took it) but called others lazy for doing so. They give foreign aid because 1. It's the right humane thing to do and 2. So that they have leverage with the country once the crisis is over. Also, they gave weapons...not cash. They also do this to feed the military industrial complex. The same reason our military budget is getting close to 1 tril. Ask yourself, does it really need to be that much? I think not and alot of people get kickbacks from funneling that money into the budget. Welcome to corruption 101. Now on top of all that, Republicans want to slash ssi and Medicare to "balance the budget" yet no talk about defense funding being too large.

    • @jeep19
      @jeep19 Před rokem

      How you conveniently forgot the republicans gave the rich, the top 1%, a trillion dollar tax break! DumptyTrump added $7trillion to the debt, but fiscal responsibility only comes up when Dems are in control.

    • @censoredeveryday3320
      @censoredeveryday3320 Před rokem +1

      The corruption is off the charts and I don't think it can be fixed.

  • @incurableromantic4006
    @incurableromantic4006 Před 2 lety +66

    Honestly what scares me more than the crisis itself is that government will make it a whole lot worse.
    Printing money, confiscating assets, setting prices, stoking racial divisions - all the stuff governments usually do that invariably make things worse.

    • @Wealthion
      @Wealthion  Před 2 lety +19

      Government: If you hate the problems it creates, just wait until you see its solutions

    • @johnbirman5840
      @johnbirman5840 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Wealthion
      Yah.
      This as they say “Is the Stuff dreams are made off”
      Not all dreams are good!

    • @idiocracyishere4531
      @idiocracyishere4531 Před 2 lety +3

      If only we had a gold backed currency.

    • @elmateo77
      @elmateo77 Před 2 lety +1

      @@idiocracyishere4531 That's not practical with how big our economy has become. There's not enough gold in the world to cover everything without increasing the price of gold by like 1000x, which would crater the electronics industry since gold is actually used to manufacture most computer chips.

    • @arymniak1
      @arymniak1 Před 2 lety

      Wait until the American Communists take over completely
      They will redistribute (steal) your tax deferred savings (IRA) in the social justice ideology of equity.
      Or they will eliminate your SSI based upon your net worth and RMD amounts.
      Communism is evil.

  • @timeforachange-i3s
    @timeforachange-i3s Před 2 lety +14

    Social Security Disability needs to be cancelled immediately. For over 80% of all people receiving benefits, they are very capable to go to work.

    • @edwardpate6128
      @edwardpate6128 Před rokem

      You don't know that'

    • @DrSchor
      @DrSchor Před rokem +1

      Please supply reference for 80%

    • @genxx2724
      @genxx2724 Před rokem +1

      I’ve see a lot of that. Able-bodied people claiming depression or anxiety, slopping at the trough for a lifetime.

  • @ellajones9787
    @ellajones9787 Před rokem +3

    Interesting. I'm 63, getting ready to retire and have monies in IRAs and 401K, but no pension. I am fine financially because of 3 things my parents always harped on: live below your means, save as much as you can, and get rid of debt. Wise words to live by but unfortunately, most people today spend themselves into the ground.

  • @fed_up_cowboy
    @fed_up_cowboy Před 2 lety +10

    This is the best short video I have seen on such an important topic in an easy to understand format in plain speech. Please make more videos like this, they help wake people up to the elephant in the room that NO ONE is talking about nationally or locally

  • @jbw53191
    @jbw53191 Před rokem +1

    I'm so glad I bought a very modest condo and paid it off in 10 years. It enabled me to retire at 62 and then move to Mexico where the cost of living is a third of what it is in the States.
    Oh, and I also didn't have children.

  • @led0073
    @led0073 Před rokem +3

    My retirement plans are really good, one day I will be at work, the next I will just be dead!

  • @July.4.1776
    @July.4.1776 Před rokem +3

    Social security is not an entitlement as you start paying into the system at age 18 in my case I will have paid 44 years into the system at age 62. If I work past this it will close in on 50 years of paying into the system. Please do not call this an entitlement as in my case paid into the system for decades. 🤔

    • @ghackworth
      @ghackworth Před rokem

      You paid in to support the payouts of the current system. Like he said it will become insolvent & payments will need to be cut. Anyone relying on SS alone is in for problems.

  • @henryrichards1686
    @henryrichards1686 Před 2 lety +46

    I’m 25 and If I am not trying to retire by 40 but I do want more financial flexibility (aka keep a job but be able to pull from some investments to supplement income) then should I consider putting more into the third bucket than somebody my age traditionally would? Obviously wouldn’t get the tax advantage of a IRA but I would be able to pull the money at 40 to do what I want with it

    • @markjaeyoungchoi7261
      @markjaeyoungchoi7261 Před 2 lety

      If you want the ability to pull your money, I would think a brokerage account is probably the right resource for you. I'd recommend dividing your attention between a tax advantaged account and a brokerage account (IF you really wish to pull from your resources and not fully "Retire" later in life).

    • @lisabarnes8071
      @lisabarnes8071 Před 2 lety

      Both have their perks, you can save for retirement outside of a retirement plan, such as in an individual investment account or employing the services of a retirement planner/investment advisor

    • @drfrankhutchinson2031
      @drfrankhutchinson2031 Před 2 lety

      @@lisabarnes8071 I have thought about this, but haven't figured out the right way to go about consulting a reputable one.

    • @lisabarnes8071
      @lisabarnes8071 Před 2 lety

      @@drfrankhutchinson2031 Really? where have you looked? (dont say YT) I am close to retirement with 7.2M to my name outside of retirement accounts. I have been using services of a CFP since 5 years ago, she contributed to my portfolio progress today.

    • @charlesblanchard4065
      @charlesblanchard4065 Před 2 lety

      ​@@lisabarnes8071 Who is she? Does she offer her services to about anyone? Can you share more details?

  • @onefreelife
    @onefreelife Před rokem +3

    I am 71. I've worked since 15. I have a 2 year degree, and raised 3 children on my own due to their Vietnam vet father becoming a heroin drug addict while in Vietnam. He was a medic and faked his own drug tests to return to the states. One son had a congenital disease that killed him when he was 25. I could never save for retirement because of enormous medical bills for him. My other two sons have issues of their own. I fell through the cracks. I'm growing weary of working. I will be forced to live in a vehicle or a tent when I'm no longer able to work. Rents are too high. I think I'll park my vehicle with a view of mountains. At least I'll die surrounded by beauty. America is cruel

  • @noreenn6976
    @noreenn6976 Před rokem +1

    The significant rise in rents and home prices is making it even more difficult to save toward retirement.

  • @timsandman
    @timsandman Před 2 lety +9

    Thank you Adam, sobering but very useful info and healthy stuff to know and be reminded about! It's the exact same here in the UK as the US.

  • @Justin-ce8mf
    @Justin-ce8mf Před 2 lety +13

    Hey Adam, so I'm a 23 year old living up in Canada and absolutely love this channel. My mother is in the exact same position, has nothing saved and is barely getting by as it stands. Any recommendations on how to plan for retirement when you are on the verge of entering it?
    Thanks so much!
    - Justin

    • @Wealthion
      @Wealthion  Před 2 lety +10

      I gave a number of suggestions for someone in her situation at the end of this video, so I'd start with those. Also, there are Elder Care consultants out there, who can help you & your mom navigate what State programs are available to seniors at her (low) income&assets level. Contact several, interview them and contract with whichever one seems best.

    • @tomasr.533
      @tomasr.533 Před rokem +5

      Justin, don't follow in your mother's footsteps. Start saving now. You have years to compound earnings. In your twenties work on your income and your savings. Read the "Millionaire next door". Best of luck with your mother. Resist destroying your financial opportunity in your efforts to help her. Just my 2 cents. Best wishes.

  • @noreenn6976
    @noreenn6976 Před rokem +1

    ADAM, A short video on how folks who are behind on retirement can improve their situation, thanks in advance.

  • @niciassmith1204
    @niciassmith1204 Před 2 lety +4

    There a lot of people in their 60s and 70s working basic jobs now, far more then when I was a kid.

  • @Maelu-op9gf
    @Maelu-op9gf Před 2 lety +5

    This is shocking data… half close to retirement have nothing 🥺 oh my!

  • @RadicallyFRUGAL
    @RadicallyFRUGAL Před 2 lety +9

    People with insufficient savings are going to have to move in together become roommates for anybody that has a house an empty nester that has a house they should rent out rooms to friends who were still healthy and still working to give them a break on paying for independent rent for a unit that they use just by themselves and pool resources for food preparation just to make things a little bit easier

    • @edl8248
      @edl8248 Před 2 lety +7

      Yes, also lots of multi-generation households coming… young people moving in with parents and parents moving in with young and middle aged people. Tough for the finances and the ego, but may actually make stronger families which I think the West could use right now.

    • @RadicallyFRUGAL
      @RadicallyFRUGAL Před 2 lety +2

      @@edl8248 threat history multi-generational households have been the norm I've always had a fondness for The Waltons type of setup

    • @bugsbunny2357
      @bugsbunny2357 Před rokem

      Great. ...what other people should do according to you.

    • @RadicallyFRUGAL
      @RadicallyFRUGAL Před rokem +1

      @@bugsbunny2357 I'm just making suggestions based on the success that I've had in adapting to this difficult environment I have zero debt I've cut my Baseline expenditures down to less than 20% of my gross revenue and I'm not making a huge amount of money and I've stabilized my income because I have more control over it people do whatever they want to do but you know if they're stuck in debt and they're in trouble they've got to get out of it

  • @Delta922
    @Delta922 Před rokem +2

    I lost my job, flat broke, can't pay my rent, have $8k in credit card debt and got my car repoed last month. How about some solutions bud 😠

  • @CT-yc4gd
    @CT-yc4gd Před rokem +2

    My father retired, but that was only because he was an officer for 27 yrs. No such luck for me. I need to open an IRA, but I can barely afford to put anything in it since I make so little and my rent is 1700/month. Can't find a cheaper place to rent in the area either outside of the odd bedroom here and again. Those run about 1k/month.
    IF I did decided to make the sacrifice and go back to renting bedrooms, I'd have to give up my 2 furballs as well since bedroom renters rarely if ever allow pets.

  • @stevenmccallan9202
    @stevenmccallan9202 Před rokem +5

    Excellent analysis! So many people in so much trouble. Looks like many older people will be working till they drop

    • @noreenn6976
      @noreenn6976 Před rokem

      And having multiple roommates to afford housing

  • @user-99.99
    @user-99.99 Před 2 lety +6

    Great summary! Do more of these please.

  • @skepticalmechanic
    @skepticalmechanic Před 2 lety +1

    Not me baby! Been a saver all my life and I’m retiring in December… I’m all set! People would laugh at me when I ate ever meal and packed my lunch… bought used clothing… never drove a new car… now at 62 my dream is here!!!

    • @DrSchor
      @DrSchor Před rokem

      The deadly sin of pride you have taken up must kill you in the end , as it is written.

  • @prandn
    @prandn Před rokem +1

    Adam, I AM says: “ WELL DONE, GOOD & FAIRHFUL SERVANT “. I also am IMPRESSED.
    Thank you!!!

  • @guzzi95
    @guzzi95 Před rokem +5

    Great advice.. I pulled my money out of the stock market and put it into a couple of 5 year Indexed Annuities. And I started a 4-CD ladder. I am not yet having to draw from my investments. I got tired of the yoyo markets. I previously had a 7 year Fixed index annuity that I did really well on. It matured and I turned it into a 5 year. No more worries about the markets going up and down. Help these viewers learn about the different types of Annuities that might give them a little more piece of mind..

    • @jeffc1347
      @jeffc1347 Před rokem

      I guess peace of mind is subjective, maybe your annuity will keep up with inflation which can give you peace of mind. But over a long period of time you will definitely have a lot less earnings.

  • @scottdorsey8220
    @scottdorsey8220 Před 2 lety +9

    With hyper inflation at play, no amount of money will be enough for most to 'feel' safe about retirement. Also, savings placed in a bank is unsound, since those assets can be frozen or stolen, if ever a bail-in ever takes place. A home and precious metals are probably among the safest assets to consider today.

    • @agates9383
      @agates9383 Před rokem

      Exactly right, a paid off home (which they may try to tax away from owners) and PM's, and maybe some way to protect it. Check out how others made it in their countries when economic collapse came calling. Seems the avg Joe/Jane either had a skill they could barter with OR they had PMs to buy things they wanted that their hyperinflated currencies could no longer buy, the REALLY smart ones MOVED. Get a scale and some way to test purity:-)

    • @philipdefrancisco7540
      @philipdefrancisco7540 Před rokem

      Hyperinflation would be 1000% per year, not 8%.

  • @MBihon2000
    @MBihon2000 Před rokem

    Keeping up with the Joneses, a brand new 5 bedroom, 3 bathroom house, two1/2 car garage, a large deck, in-ground pool. A camper to use twice a year and a hig speed boat a weekend use about 3x a year. That is life in America, my friend!

  • @MsElaine122
    @MsElaine122 Před 2 lety +7

    Great video Adam. Also urge everyone to create / update their wills. States have changed their will templates and your current will may be nearly worthless today. Please folks, create, verify, update your wills. Save your heirs hassel and $$$ in probate. Put your real estate into land trusts to xfer to heirs outside of probate via successor beneficiaries in the trust doc. Land trusts are a simple tool. But makee sure to work with the local county tax assessor to bridge your homestead exemption accross the title change. Best to all.

    • @michaelmeilink44
      @michaelmeilink44 Před 2 lety +3

      Spot on Adam. You reflected every concern I have shared with my wife. Thankfully we were ants not grasshoppers and started saving and investing by age 25 after finishing professional school. We shoped at Aldi, had no expensive vacations(just stacations), drove inexpensive cars, (no BMW’s), paiid for things(no credit cards) and retired successfully 4 years ago. The first payment was always to retirement. My biggest fear is government reducing benefits because they think we have accumulated enough to reduce benefits. Funny, penalized by doing the right thing. If means testing why should this be done without expense testing. Should someone be entitled to a portion of someone else’s benefit that saved nothing but had a new car every two years, took fabulous vacations every year, bought the most expensive house, maybe a vacation home and now has saved nothing. Government not considering cause of no savings in means testing is another mistake of government and again disregards moral hazard in decisions.

  • @patcurrie9888
    @patcurrie9888 Před rokem +3

    For someone that took advantage of 401ks I'm sick to death of the market swings up and down, gains are negligible. I'm fortunate to be at the tail end of the Baby Boom, so I have two smaller pensions. While I worked at American Express in the later 2000s, they were phasing out pensions. There should be repayments to the SS piggy bank to shore it up before any other handouts.

  • @pbr549
    @pbr549 Před rokem +11

    Adam great video. Fortunately my first manager Hank made me invest in the 401K and retirement. 12% of my income for over 30 years. Back in 1980's they screwed my SS survivor benefits and now it looks like they will screw with me again because I invested and saved my money. I can see never getting what I paid into SS back. Sad. Love your channel you do a good service. Thanks for the I-bond information 10k @ 9.62% was a great call. Keep the ideas coming take care.

    • @tomasr.533
      @tomasr.533 Před rokem +3

      The 401k is a great savings vehicle if you take advantage of it. Is it as good as the old pension plan... no. But those are mostly gone at this point. I usually saved 25% and reviewed which funds to put my money in looking for low expense ratios and good returns. If they company didn't have a good 401k plan, I would find another company. Some small companies can't afford good plans and the expense ratios can kill your gains.

  • @rogerwilliams8535
    @rogerwilliams8535 Před 2 lety +5

    I love the short explainer video’s Adam, keep ‘em coming. Thanks for all you do.

  • @DanStratocaster1
    @DanStratocaster1 Před 2 lety +3

    Yes, but many have enormously big houses, and multiple car payments

  • @SSNewberry
    @SSNewberry Před 2 lety +5

    We gave the money as "tax cuts." The propertied class wants 1 thing: never pay taxes. This was true in Rome and it is true today.

  • @mathematician1234
    @mathematician1234 Před 2 lety +15

    Thank you. A surprisingly intelligent video. I was pessimistically expecting a heavy sales pitch at the end, and I appreciated the low-key alternative approach. Keep up the good work.
    A key help for me was starting a side-gig small business while I was still a university student. I kept it up while working full time in two successive careers. Now that I am retired, I am still running my side-gig and it augments my investment income.

  • @leahsiegel9068
    @leahsiegel9068 Před 2 lety +8

    Adam Taggart is one of the nicest utubers out there giving financial advice. Always informative, terrific delivery. thank you. , Looking forward to more of your informative interviews!

  • @figtime
    @figtime Před 2 lety +15

    Absolutely love your content! You're level headed and pragmatic and it's great to see people become so popular that don't have to use shock and awe to gain viewership. Keep up the great work, it's fun to watch this channel grow and really insightful!

  • @Greg_call
    @Greg_call Před rokem +3

    You are a natural speaker. Good voice. Excellent information.

  • @douglasthompson9482
    @douglasthompson9482 Před 2 lety +4

    Agree....the next generation is even worse. Most people will never retire, that's really a bad situation.

  • @djrr1003
    @djrr1003 Před rokem +1

    you should also mention that a lot of people don't stay employed...they have employment gaps, they quit, get fired, and live on unemployment and a gig job until the money runs out and they need a documented job and salary for a year or so. By 62, they are missing 10-15 years of documented work toward social security and don't have a measurable 401K.

  • @bdflatlander
    @bdflatlander Před rokem +1

    This guy is right.
    Scary times lie ahead for this country including a mass increase in senior homelessness unless something radically changes.

  • @kleetus88
    @kleetus88 Před 2 lety +6

    Adam: I am 49 and I am taking all of your excellent advice, but what long term inflation rate would you use in the calculations for monthly expenses? I know I can live comfortably on $10k/month now, but what about 16-20 years from now? That $10k isn't going to cut it, but I don't know what inflation might be.

    • @HidingFromFate
      @HidingFromFate Před 2 lety +2

      $10K a month now? That's sound pretty extravagant. But maybe you've got a huge mortgage and expensive auto loan and multiple kids.

    • @kleetus88
      @kleetus88 Před 2 lety +2

      @@HidingFromFate no debt, we just want to ensure we aren't cutting it too close. Taxes, insurance, pet care, food, utilities are expensive.

    • @galvint2
      @galvint2 Před 2 lety +1

      In a previous video, Adam had a guest on that suggested that inflation may stay high for 5-6 years as one way to lower the debt to GDP ratio. So if you have 10K now, it will be "worth" about 7,350 in 5 years at 5% inflation. At 8% inflation, in 5 years it would be "worth" about $6,590. If inflation was 5% for 20 years, your 10K would be worth 3584, and if inflation was 8% for 20 years your 10K would be worth 1,886.

    • @jwall62
      @jwall62 Před 2 lety +3

      Dang, 10K per month. I make over $200K per year and my monthly expenses are less than $6K. I live in the northeast where it ain't cheap. We travel several times a year to the Caribbean too.

  • @johnandersonvideos
    @johnandersonvideos Před 2 lety +3

    I’m 66 and looking to retire at 70. I’ve got a substantial 401(k) that I’ve contributed to for over 30 years now. What concerns me most is what the politicians in Washington will do. Will they do means testing and reduce my SS benefits? Will they levy a special tax on my 401(k)? Will they do more stimulus and money printing, causing prices to rise even faster? It’s hard to plan with all the unknowns.

    • @DrSchor
      @DrSchor Před rokem +1

      since you elected them, they will do what you tell them. dont be lazy, get on the phone.

    • @sinebar
      @sinebar Před rokem

      Most likely they will raise the retirement age for sure. Probably increase the Social Security tax cap. What ever they do it won't affect current recipients. Probably only effect 54 and younger. Although if you are really well off they may go after you.

  • @janiceschroeder9908
    @janiceschroeder9908 Před rokem +2

    Being that this economy is now a service economy as opposed to a unionized manufacturing economy, the accompanying low wages mean people have barely enough money to put food on the table and a roof over their heads. There is no extra money to save for retirement or an emergency fund. Why does nobody address this issue? Why does nobody even bring up this issue unless it's to cut social security and/or Medicare, which isn't very good insurance now? But thank you for at least touching on this. It's time to tax the wealthy and tax them for social security but give them no money for a change instead of constantly screwing the bottom 90% financially, and also tax some of their other money away. The bottom 90% hasn't suffered from "poor planning." They have no money to plan with.

  • @alfred1535
    @alfred1535 Před 2 lety +2

    You are # 1 on my chart on CZcams everything you say I am going through it. Thank you my friend

  • @sallyb6911
    @sallyb6911 Před 2 lety +6

    Adam you are an immensly intelligent and caring person, we could use more Americans like you. Yes I would like to have you detail what this major crisis and end game is going to do to 401K's, IRA's and annuities. I fear most of the funds of these retirement vehicles are invested in stocks and bonds which are going to continue spiralling down to almost nothing. For the few who have savings I would suggest physical gold and silver.