A recent study by the Employee Benefits Research Institute showed that over 50
percent of workers ages 45 to 54 have less than $50,000 saved for retirement.
The Center for Retirement Research (CRR) at Boston College completed a study
that showed nearly 54 percent of low income Baby Boomers born between 1955 and
1964 are at risk for missing their retirement savings goal. Research by
Fidelity Investments shows that most Baby Boomers have enough saved for
retirement to replace just 59 percent of their full-time working income. The
numbers don't lie: most Boomers are not ready to retire, regardless of what
they think.
But all is not lost. It's never too late to start planning your retirement.
However, the closer you get to retirement age, the more aggressively you need
to save. It's also possible that you might have to work a few years longer than
you thought you would, or pursue money making ventures outside of your life
long career.
Okay, say you've hit the big five zero. Retirement is suddenly not such a far
off proposition, but a short term reality. In no way are you ready financially,
so it's time to buckle down. The first thing you need to do is take a good,
long look at that 401(k) of yours. Max it out. That's right, make yourself a
budget and sacrifice if you must, but find every last available dime and pump
it into that fund. It deserves your attention. Thankfully, there's something
called a "catch-up provision" that was created for people just like
you. It allows people 50 and over to add an additional $5,000 to their 401(k)
over the maximum allowed by law in 2006. Not bad. For IRAs, you can contribute
up to $1,000 per year as a catch-up in 2006. Do it. It'll be well worth it.
Once you've maxed out your retirement funds, take a look at your personal
budget. Sit down and find out where all your money is going, and where you can
save. Pay off high-interest credit card debt as fast as you can, refinance car
or home loans, phase out your more expensive habits or hobbies; do whatever it
takes to save a few extra dollars per month towards your nest egg.
Also, don't rule out working a few more years. Many people love their jobs,
have friends at work, or enjoy being part of the everyday work force. If you
don't have grand plans of jet setting around the world during your golden
years, then there's nothing wrong with punching the clock for a little while
longer. It'll give you something to do while definitely sweetening the pot when
you do decide to retire. Done with working for the man? Then consider taking
something part-time or even launching your own start-up. It could be something
you've always been interested in, but never had the time or drive to actually
do. Who knows, it could be something you make money on and will enjoy well into
retirement. Nothing wrong with that.
However you choose to build your long forsaken nest egg, don't wait a minute
longer. When it comes to saving for retirement, time is money.
Joseph Kenny writes for the Credit Card Guide, offering views on credit cards in the UK, visit them today for some great 0% balance transfer offers and start clearing credit card debt today.
Article Source: DesireToRetire.com We have the internet's best retirement calculators! Click here to try them out.




