How much is enough for retirement?
How much is enough for retirement? 
Economy

How Much Money Do I Need To Retire?

ByMonika Halan

How much do we need to save out of our incomes to know that we will hit retirement with enough to maintain our lifestyle for another 30 years?

A guy I know wanted to retire when he was 25. He just didn’t have the money. If I get Rs 1 crore, he said, then I’ll retire. Now, 30 years later, he’s still working and still not done with gathering the corpus he needs to retire. Anyway, he’s wiser and agrees that financial security and going to work need not be either/or. People can continue to work even if they are financially secure.

But how much do we need to save out of our incomes to know that we will hit retirement with enough to maintain our lifestyle for another 30 years? Every time I speak to a friend about buying a life cover, he tells me—the risk we have is not of dying too soon, but of living too long.

Vikram Prasad, pointed me towards a story about economist Willaim Sharpe who calls retirement planning for people “the nastiest and hardest problem in finance”. You can read the story here. Nobel prize winning Sharpe is well known for his work on the capital asset pricing model.

The model calculates expected returns based on varied levels of risk and states that taking on more risk is necessary to earn a higher return.

Forecasting what you will need in retirement is tough, says Sharpe, because there are just too many things that can change—how long you live, how long your partner lives, what the inflation, equity market, risk-free return rates will look like, how much would you actually want to consume when very old.

He has launched a Retirement Income Scenario Matrices project, where he has uploaded his data, programmes, results and resources for other research in this area to work. You can see the site here. I’m glad to see finance finally trying to solve problems of people and not just the Wall Street.

Getting the right amount for retirement is a tough nut to crack. Targeting too many compromises on lifestyle today, and having too little is not something we want to think about.

So how much is enough?

While most of the western models look at a retirement corpus that will go to zero at age 90 or 99 (people will keep eating into the capital till they either die or run out of money), this will not work in India.

From all the old people I know, the capital they have is sacrosanct. The last thing they will do is have a plan that draws down on the capital. The capital will be left as an inheritance to the kids, along with the house and other assets. Given our own cultural background, how do we plan for our retirements? How do we know that we’re on track?

We’ve asked this question earlier and found that saving your age till about 40-45 works. This means that if you are 30 and you save about 30 per cent of your post-tax income for the next 30 years, you will have enough. If you are 40, have not saved anything yet for retirement and you save 40 per cent of your post-tax income, you are good. But at 50 if you have not a rupee in savings, then you need to save 80 per cent of your post-tax income—you’ve left it too late.

My assumptions are that your income grows at ten per cent, your spending grows at six per cent a year, you consume 70 per cent of your pre-retirement spend at age 61 and then this consumption expense grows at six per cent. You definitely use an equity route to retirement corpus building, and you use laddering (using a mix of fixed return and equity post-retirement), assume inflation is at six per cent, the risk-free return is at seven per cent, and you live till 99. I also assume that your EMIs (equated monthly instalments) and other goals are all on top of this saving.

Remember, the spending is only growing at six per cent, while saving is growing at 30 per cent or more—so there is enough elbow room to target other goals in this model.

This model also gives plenty of elbow room for black swan events by overestimating the final corpus.

Do remember that this is a rough rule of thumb. If you already have savings and assets, then you can save a bit less.

You could save less in the early years towards retirement and ramp it up in your 50 plus years when your earnings are higher, and spends are lower. Do factor in the EPF (Employees’ Provident Fund) contributions and the PPF (Public Provident Fund) investments you make in that 30 per cent or 40 per cent saving number.

The other question that worries us is this: how do I know that I have done enough for my retirement already?

If the goal is to have enough at age 60, is there another thumb rule that can help us map our progress as we age?

Fidelity Investments has a retirement guideline that maps the journey of the retirement corpus over the years. You can see it here. '

At age 40 you should have three times your annual income as your retirement corpus already. If you earn Rs 15 lakh a year at age 40, you should have Rs 45 lakh in your retirement corpus. At 50, you should have six times your annual income.

If you have Rs 40 lakh annual income at age 50, you should already have Rs 2.4 crore in your corpus. At age 60, or at retirement, you should have eight times your annual salary.

Earning a crore at 60 must have Rs 8 crore as a corpus. The Fidelity numbers assume a US scenario with social security and other benefits, but the multipliers roughly work out to a rule of thumb for India as well.

Remember that these are rough rules of the road; for your individual situation, you have no recourse but to find a sound financial planner.

This article was originally published in Mint and has been republished here with permission.