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darkemeralds ([personal profile] darkemeralds) wrote2011-09-28 04:02 pm

Retreat! Part 2

Cross-posted to Google+

Melinda, the adviser at ING who manages the deferred compensation portfolio for my employer (and who is therefore very busy helping hundreds of us late Baby Boomers prepare to retire), is a sharp, savvy woman.

The last guy I went to was at least fifteen years my junior. His office featured studio portraits of his lovely wife and several handsome matching kids, as well as prominent insignia of his religious convictions. I'm not sure he could actually see the likes of me, and he certainly couldn't see my point of view on life any better than I could see his. His financial advice, unsurprisingly, bore little relationship to my wishes and none to my strengths or talents.

Melinda, on the other hand, said, "Yeah, you work [in the World's Tallest Basement] for twenty, twenty-five years, and that's it, you've had it, you're burnt out. And yet you're still active, fit and healthy, and you want to enjoy life while it's still enjoyable."

Well, yes, Melinda. That's it exactly. Thanks for sayin'.

I don't have final figures yet, and nobody's pretending that I'll be able to retire like a queen. Unlike so many Americans, however, I have a retirement fund, and I have access to a full coverage health plan whose monthly premium will be no more than the rent on a modest apartment.

So really, all I have to do is scale back by one modest rent, and retirement is within my sights!
executrix: (crazy for trying)

[personal profile] executrix 2011-10-01 12:32 am (UTC)(link)
tehomet: Awww, they'll see you in an emergency room if you don't have insurance, but then they'll send you a whacking great bill and possibly foreclose on your mortgage (unless they have to get in line behind the bank).

emeraldsedai: is the $700/mo. just COBRA, though? Because then after 18 months you'll need individual coverage. And if they say they provide retiree health coverage, it is perfectly legal--and frequently happens--for them to later say, "Hey, we changed our minds, we're going to reduce or eliminate our contribution."

FWIW, I'm 58 so several years older than you are, and I pay about $9,000 a year for an HMO with a $100 emergency room deductible, $30 copay for a physician visit, and a $300/day hospital copay.
executrix: (horcrux)

[personal profile] executrix 2011-10-01 12:44 am (UTC)(link)
Good work having retiree health benefits! They are a unicorn.

I'm in a constant state of Grump because I need $20k a year just to pay my real estate taxes and health insurance, and that's before I pay any *income* taxes or, you know, pay the gas bill or go to yard sales or buy food.
tehomet: (Default)

[personal profile] tehomet 2011-10-01 12:46 am (UTC)(link)
I currently make about nine grand a year (as I'm on an incentivised career break from the public service and get paid a small stipend), and I can afford private health insurance, which makes all those things (emergency room visits, GP visits, stays in hospital) free.

tehomet: Awww, they'll see you in an emergency room if you don't have insurance, but then they'll send you a whacking great bill and possibly foreclose on your mortgage (unless they have to get in line behind the bank).

Oh, lovely! And then once foreclosed upon, since in the US there's, from what I hear, no safety net (little or no homeless services and feck all social welfare), one can look forward to living on the pavement. Or sidewalk. Or whatever. Nice.

I've actually been to the States a fair few times and it is always unsettling seeing the huge prevalence of homeless people. In the richest country in the world!



executrix: (andguns)

[personal profile] executrix 2011-10-01 12:50 am (UTC)(link)
Where your treasure is laid up, there too your heart will be--right now, the government is controlled by people who believe in "anarchy plus the constable" and deprive the government of tax revenue in order to stop it from having any safety net programs. And, of course, all of the wealth accrued in the last few decades went to a handful of plutocrats. There's no provision for products and services that the private sector doesn't think are profitable enough, and no controls on the two warring superpowers: health insurers and pharmaceutical companies.