The risk of a long life
How to make sure your money lasts as long as you do

The "risk," in this case, refers to a concept called longevity risk. The risk comes from not knowing how long you and your spouse are going to live. Because that's an unknown, you have no upfront certainty about how long your retirement savings need to last.
Hope for a long life also means preparing for it financially.
"The economic impact of longevity risk is actually larger than the stock market risk," says Moshe Milevsky, a York University finance professor and the author (with Alexandra Macqueen) of Pensionize Your Nest Egg.
Living longer than you anticipated is good news, to be sure. But it can also be a financial shock if you're not prepared for it. "We all expect to live into our 80s," Milevsky says. But he points out that a quick perusal of the local death notices will quickly show the wide variation in how long people actually live. A few don't make it to retirement age while some live past 95 or 100.
'What if I run out of money?'
That's when you worry: "If I live to 100, I'll run out money." Milevsky says the reality isn't quite that bad.
"Running out of money in retirement is a bit of a fallacy," he says.
Milevsky points out that the Old Age Security pension, the Guaranteed Income Supplement and CPP retirement pensions — all guaranteed and all fully indexed — ensure that today's and tomorrow's seniors won't ever "run out of money."
Which is not to say that they won't have to reduce their standard of living in retirement.
'If you don't have a handle on spending, you start to feel things are tight.' —Warren Baldwin, T.E. Wealth
"What people are really worried about is that the retirement they've dreamed of won't materialize," he says.
As for how much that dream retirement is going to cost, the experts say it's essential to get a handle on spending.
"Almost no matter what the level of assets or income, if you don't have a handle on spending, you start to feel things are tight," says Warren Baldwin, regional vice-president at T.E. Wealth, a fee-only financial planning firm.
"You have to sit down and analyze your budget."
He points out that if the mortgage is paid off, the kids are through school, the house renovations are done and you're not putting any more into your RRSP, your spending requirements in retirement may be quite different from your working years.
RRIF payout schedule (assuming 6% return and opening balance of $100,000) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Age on Jan. 1 | Balance in RRIF | Minimum withdrawal (%) |
2011 | 65 | $100,000 | $4,000 (4.00%) |
2016 | 70 | $107,058 | $5,353 (5.00%) |
2021 | 75 | $99,469 | $7,808 (7.85%) |