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Wait, has anyone ever recommended to stop retirement contributions, but keep luxuries, to get out of debt? Never heard that one.
Usually, it's all of the above. As others mentioned, debt could be a rather losing battle at high interest rates - better to just tackle it and move on. Thing about retirement is that it tends to be a large figure. Probably larger than most things you can cut in your budget. I also agree with the sentiment of cutting retirement, because to us, some of our retirement is necessary, and some is luxury. Putting 20% to retirement is a luxury we choose over other things. It's easy to cut if times get tougher. We've never put in less than 10%. I'd consider 10% the "necessary" part. The other 10% I would cut in a pinch. It's easy to cut and it's a large figure. |
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MM, a lot of people come and ask about cutting retirement? Then when they post a budget there is cable, car loan, cell phones, eating out, etc.
What the heck? Why are those in the budget but the retirement gets cut? And lovcom, if you cut the retirement, have you cut everything else? No clothes shopping, no car loans, etc? Did you make all other sacrifices first?
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Can you really say it's a need to have a cell phone with all the bells and whistles? OR cable? More than retirement savings?
That some budgets build in eating out, kids activities, etc, but then cut retirement to pay debt? How can you justify still spending, on what I think are luxuries above retirement?
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To truly evaluate this, a "time" aspect needs to be put with the money to evaluate the various dimensions of the problem.
Is the goal to "be out of debt the fastest"? Is the goal to "have a high net worth?" Is the goal to "retire as early as possible?" Is the goal to "be financially independant as early in life as possible?" For example- if someone has 100k of cc debt and has only 3k of retirement contributions... if the "debt free" timeline by stopping retirement contributions is 10 years and continuting retirement contributions is 11 years, that adds some context to solution. In another example if the debt is 30k and same 3k of retirement contributions, and debt free by stopping retirement contributions is 1 year, but if retirement is not stopped is 3 years... I would "argue" that you could invest more in years 2 and 3 (6K) that you lose in year 1 (3k). And more examples would need to follow on goals which were not "get out of debt the fastest". My goals all center around being financially independant (not needing my employer) so that biases all decisions towards not stopping investing because to meet the true goal (having enough money where 3% provides my annual expenses) trumps being debt free now, being debt free in 5 years or any other "short or mid term financial goal". Long term goals take precedence.
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Great points Jim!
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this is a good example of my previous post... what is your GOAL? if goal #1 is to be debt free, then its obvious to chase the 6.8% debt... however I believe you have hit the tipping point where investing sooner helps you with most goals which have a 10-20 year time horizon. If a debt payment is $600/month and you would pay "$400 extra" as a guess, you need to weigh the following factors: 1) If you paid $600/mo, when is projected debt payoff? 2) If you paid $1000/mo when is projected debt payoff? 3) is a delta (measure it in months for simple math)... If you paid $1000/mo, how much do you "save" in interest? (The lower the interest rate, the less this savings is). Then ask more questions and make a timeline If you paid $600/mo and invested $400/month in 60 months debt is paid off in 60 months you have $24,000 saved or invested in 72 months you have $36,000 saved or invested (next 12 months is $1000/month invested) If you paid $1000/mo in 40 months you would have $0 saved in 60 months you would would have $20,000 saved in 72 months you would have $32,000 saved or invested In this example, it shows investing gives higher savings 72 months from now. This example is really simple, with made up numbers, you need to plug better numbers in... and this gets more detailed if you add in interest paid or interest earned (I am not adding that in to keep it simple).
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Getting out of debt is a recent phenomenon, brought about by the recession and loss/or perceived threatened loss of employment. For the vast majority of N Americans, retirement is the elephant in the room. We know it's there but we don't want to see it. We are accustomed to instant gratification, enjoying a dinner out, watching our kids sport competition, mobile phones keeping us in touch 24/7, buying the latest electronic gadget or trendy garb [on credit].
There is no immediate gratification from retirement withholding or even employer match. Those that saw the value of their retirement plan plummet likely wished they'd gone on an exotic holiday rather than save! Don't you think? There needs to be a lot more education about retirement now that defined plans that our parents enjoyed...have all but disappeared unless you are military, a poliician or government. |
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Okay, here's my story:
When I found out my husband's CC debt two years ago was $42K and growing due to late payments, fees and growing interest rates, I had to look at all the options. First of all, I knew there was no way in he!! I was going to help him pay it off with my money because I didn't help him spend it. But I knew it was in my best interest to help him figure out how to pay it off. We keep our money separate but our financial fates are intertwined since if he is unable to work due to illness or there is an emergency then the whole family suffers. So it was imperative he reduce his exposure immediately. That meant cutting retirement temporarily, getting a cheaper insurance plan AND changing lifestyle. So I put some of his debts on my 0% credit cards which gave him some room to breathe and pay down the principal. So now the family is at risk and my credit could be potentially damaged. Do you think I gave a care if he is a little short on the other end when he retires? Nope. He had to take care of us in the now AND he had to pay off the debt that was in my name. Besides he has a pension + he gets 1% in his TSP just for showing up to work. It ticks me off a little that he is so irresponsible but no matter what he is going to be fine. After one year, when the fire had died down, I had him to resume his retirement up to the match only (5%). When the debt is finally paid off in about 1 year, then he can resume up to 10% or whatever.
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Wow, Jim, that's really interesting. So if interest paid and interest earned canceled each other out, investing some while paying off some debt would be better than just paying off debt in some scenarios. Thanks for this idea; I'll have to play around with it.
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A few points- very few decisions will come down to a simple decision of "if interest earned equals interest paid, consider investing". This is because interest earned is seldom guaranteed. If a person puts money on a timeline, they can often use the timeline to make their decisions for them... helps take some of the emotion out of the decision making process. Here is what I mean: In my situation, my goal is very clear- I want to retire the year after my 18 month old kids graduate HS (that is in 16 years). 2027 is the year I target for this. There is a long line of financial checkpoints and goals which are "mid term" goals or steps along the way. For example, paying off 1st and 2nd mortgages, removing car payments from the budget, having enough money in retirement accounts, probably having money in a taxable account I can access during early retirement. And that list is much longer, but those are good enough for this discussion. I obviously cannot do "all" those goals at once. And I need time to achieve lots of them- like having retirement accounts provide enough money, and also paying off a mortgage. Few people could create either as a goal, then solve them in 5 years... time is needed to solve the goals. We have a 2nd mortgage which is 7.5% interest (fixed) and many people here would suggest "pay that off fast". The issue is "at the expense of what goal" and that is where "financial planning" is custom to each person. The debt is 50k, we set aside 20k+ to retirement accounts annually, and if you did the math, stopping retirement contributions for 2.5 years, or cutting them for 5 would solve the debt, but when I use the 16 year time horizon I know investing more now, and waiting until a car is paid off is a better solution than stopping or slowing investments down- relative to goal #1. My point is focus on the real goal, not on a "step" towards achieving that goal. Because so so many things will always appear "more important" short term than retirement savings, but once you lose time, saving for retirement will be quite difficult. If you are familiar with my "doubles" method for checking retirement savings progress, I know I am REAL CLOSE to hitting a key double, and I know once I hit that, that what I already contributed should be enough to retire on, given enough time to let that money double (2 more times).
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