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Living Too Long is a Financial Disaster

I frequently joke with financial planning clients that dying young increases the success of a plan, since it means life-savings need to last for fewer years. However, since there isn’t a way to accurately predict lifespans, it’s prudent to take a longer lifespan into consideration when planning. Better be safe than to run out of money! Indeed, depending on individual situations, I use 90, 95, or even 100 as ending ages in financial plans.

As people live longer, their financial assets need to last longer in order to support them. Dr. Aubrey de Grey, chief science officer of the SENS Foundation (Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence) asserts that medical science has discovered various ways of slowing the aging process by repairing certain types of cell damage that occur as a result of getting older. In an interview on the Goldstein on Gelt radio show, Dr. de Grey said, “If we can repair that damage periodically, then we will do a much better job of postponing the diseases of old age.”

As Dr. de Grey and other scientists work to perfect anti-aging techniques, average life expectancy continues to grow. “We’re talking a reasonably long way, but still on the scale of a human lifespan, which is not that far, which means that quite a lot of people who are alive today or even adults today may live long enough tobenefit from these therapies when they arrive,” asserts Dr. de Grey.

What are the financial effects of a growing elderly population? Will people retire much later, or will they work longer, perhaps beginning a second career mid-life? A lot depends on the medical progress that will be made over the next 25 years.

Either way, as life expectancy increases, the importance of retirement planning increases.  Speak with your financial planner to determine if your assets will last throughout your golden years, as you may be living even more of them.

To watch my interview with Dr. Aubrey de Grey and go to www.GoldsteinOnGelt.com  or read the transcript of my interview with Dr. de Grey.

Profile Perspectives is a personal finance blog based on articles Doug Goldstein, CFP®, director of Profile Investment Services, Ltd., published in The Jerusalem Post. The information posted is purely informational and does not constitute investment or tax advice. Advertisements on the site are neither endorsements nor recommendations. Consult your professional advisors before making any investments based on articles or advertisements.