Special Report July 2, 2009, 5:00PM EST

Can You Afford to Retire?

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When you retire, your risk becomes the opposite: outlasting your assets. Again, the solution is to pool risks, this time by buying annuities that will keep paying as long as you live. Insurers can keep annuity prices reasonably low because profits from those who die young offset losses from those who die old. Some advisers say you should put a quarter or even half of your savings into annuities. The downside is that you lose control of the assets that you annuitize. But the peace of mind is irreplaceable. Says Anna M. Rappaport, chairwoman of the Society of Actuaries committee on post-retirement needs and risks and president of Anna Rappaport Consulting in Chicago: "There's a bigger chance that you'll live to 100 than that you'll have a major fire."

A good supplement to annuities is long-term-care insurance, which could save you from dreary years in a substandard, Medicaid-supported nursing home if you suffer a stroke or Alzheimer's disease. For both forms of protection, look for products that are indexed to inflation. Shop for low fees. Limit default risk by splitting the policies among multiple providers, all highly rated. For annuities, shave the cost by buying ones that don't kick in until, say, 85.

A SCIENTIFIC APPROACH

Annuities and long-term-care insurance aren't cheap, but the only alternative, apart from good luck, is counting on a big pile of assets to get you through. Trouble is, a pile that's big enough is both extremely hard to accumulate and probably a waste of money, because the chance that you will use it all is slim.

This stuff gets complicated quickly. Planning for your retirement using rough rules of thumb is better than not planning at all. But if you want to be more scientific, you can use free software that implements consumption-smoothing principles. Economic Security Planner, whose president is Kotlikoff, sells ESPlannerPLUS ($199) and makes a stripped-down version, ESPlannerBASIC, free online.

For victims of post-crash stress disorder, the good news is that you don't need to cut your spending by anywhere near as much as the stock market has fallen in percentage terms. Kotlikoff used ESPlannerPLUS to examine how the retirement plans of a dual-income couple, "Jack and Jill Crash," would be affected by a stock market drop that cut their net worth by just over 30%. If Jack and Jill are 60, they must cut annual consumption from now until their (presumed) death at age 100 by 20%, assuming they both still plan to retire at age 65. If the couple are 45, they need to cut by only 6%. And if they are 30, they need to cut by only about 1% (chart). Kotlikoff's calculations were based on Jack and Jill saving according to the assumptions in the ESPlanner formula before the crash. He also figured stock prices would grow at 3% annually after inflation following the crash.

Other calculation methods reach similar conclusions. "The bottom line is that many people even within five years of retirement can recover from the losses of 2008," says Wei-Yin Hu, director of investment analysis and research for Financial Engines, a math-oriented advisory firm.

Smoothing your consumption over a lifetime does require discipline. When you find yourself behind on saving, it's tempting to change assumptions about the future—say, plug in a higher expected rate of return on assets. That's less painful than trimming back your lifestyle. Face it, though: The stock market is beyond your control.

It's also tempting to plug in a later retirement age, as doing so can make a huge difference. A survey in February by benefits consultant Watson Wyatt Worldwide (WW) found that fully half of workers 50 and over planned to work past age 65, and one-third of workers had upped their planned retirement age over the past year—many of them, presumably, to try to compensate for losses on retirement portfolios.

Delaying retirement, though, is more easily said than done. A Prudential Financial (PRU) survey in 2004 (not a recession year) found that 40% of workers who retired early were forced to do so by factors such as layoffs, injury, and health limitations.

SAVING YOURSELF

People who blithely assume they will work until age 70 may change their minds when the time actually comes. It ain't easy. Robert M. Gill Sr. retired as a pharmacist four years ago at the age of 63 only to go back to work this year after his 401(k) lost half of its value. Now he is working an average of 24 hours a week at a CVS pharmacy 45 minutes from his home in St. George Island, Fla. He says the work has sharpened his mind but does make his feet sore some days, and he is looking forward to re-retiring. Says Gill: "This is just a holdover until the market comes back."

When it comes right down to it, the retirement dial that's most obviously under your control is the one marked "saving." Try to set money aside for retirement before you even think about the rest of your budget. People who contribute to 401(k) and 403(b) plans through automatic deductions do exactly that. Fidelity Investments says that the average contribution actually rose slightly in 2008 vs. 2007 among the 11 million participants in corporate 401(k) plans that it manages.

For some people, simply staying the course on retirement saving isn't enough. Scott Ackerman, 38, of Lansdowne, Va., is downsizing to a smaller house because the recession has hurt business at the two health clubs he operates, and he has big medical expenses for his 1-year-old son, who has special needs. "It's a tough struggle," he says. "But we're going to make sure we have breathing room to continue to save."

The bust has hurt, all right. But if you are willing to make some sacrifices, as Ackerman has, and use smart planning methods like consumption smoothing, your retirement should turn out just fine.

For the best places to retire, how people are adjusting their plans, seniors who won't retire, and tips for the sandwich generation, view our slide shows and video at businessweek.com/go/09/retirement

Coy is Bloomberg BusinessWeek's Economics editor.

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