Retirement’s changing face
Finished work. Time to work some more?
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Finished work. Time to work some more?
It used to be Canadians pretty much shared an idea of what retirement looked like. You worked until you were 65 and then you punched your time card and went sailing or played golf. If you were lucky enough to have socked away more money, you might have quit your job five or even 10 years earlier.
Today, the definition of retirement is evolving. Why? We’re living and staying active longer. That means some people might want to work longer, just to stay busy. Another factor is many Canadians cannot count on the same generous corporate pensions their parents enjoyed. In that case, they may have to work longer whether they want to or not.
“When you talk about retirement to one person, it can now mean something completely different from what retirement means to another,” says retirement expert and certified financial planner Tom Feigs of Calgary. “Anything from fully retiring from the workforce at 55 to working part time after 65 is considered retirement,” he adds, before concluding: “Canadians are redefining the concept of retirement with changing trends in longevity, demographics and the workplace.”
A 2014 survey titled “The Reality of Retirement Income in Canada,” by Philip Cross at the Fraser Institute confirmed there has been a noticeable reversal of the trend to earlier retirement. While governments discuss changes to pension plan funding as the population ages, older Canadians are staying in the workforce for a few extra years. Retirements are being postponed.
A Canada Project poll conducted early this year by Maclean’s revealed more about how secure Canadians feel about their retirement prospects. When asked how confident they are that they will have enough to retire on at age 65, 62% of respondents said either “very confident” or “somewhat” confident. That leaves a lot of people either unprepared or prudently tempering their optimism.
Boomers, who are closest to retirement age, were the most confident with 64% responding positively. Across provincial lines, British Columbians were the most confident, at 68%.
“These numbers are great, showing that Canadians are taking control of their own savings for retirement and are ensuring that they take care of themselves,” says Annie Kvick, a certified financial planner with Money Coaches Canada in North Vancouver.
Retirement expert Feigs finds the poll numbers reassuring but notes how retirement trends are evolving. “Longevity and the changing workplace have put in place a trend towards a more transitional retirement,” says Feigs, who sees the same trends in force with his own financial planning clients.
“Freedom 55 is a cliché and right now, Canadians are all over the map on the topic. Sure, some want to retire early at 55, 60 or 62, but others have no inclination to retire so soon—hoping to continue working for another 10 years or so after age 65, or simply aim to work part-time for a few years to keep busy and stay engaged.”
Feigs notes that for many, retirement from their full-time job simply means the beginning of a second career. “Aging Canadians want to be more involved with community and are keen to stay busy pursuing other passions. No one wants to sit on their duff for 30 years,” says Feigs.
But are Canadians actually financially—and psychologically—preparing themselves to retire successfully, regardless of their vision of retirement? The answer is a definite ‘yes’. In fact, according to the Fraser survey, Canadians are accumulating ample resources for their retirement; the study shoots down the notion that Canadians are not prepared.
“The perception that they are not doing so is encouraged by two common errors by analysts,” notes Cross in the Fraser study. “The first is a failure to take proper account of the large amounts of saving being done by government and firms for future pensions …. And the second is an exclusive focus on the traditional ‘three pillars’ of the pension system, which include Old Age Security (OAS), the Canada and Quebec Pension plans (C/QPP), and voluntary pensions like RRSPs.”
The Fraser study also notes that at least two other key aspects of a comfortable and secure retirement are often overlooked. “One is the trillions of dollars of assets people hold outside of formal pension vehicles, most notably in home equity and non-taxable accounts. Another is the largely undocumented network of family and friends that lend physical, emotional and financial support to retirees. That support is largely ignored in the literature on the economics of retirement.”
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