Financial planning for the New Retirement requires a shift in mindset. It’s not just about accumulating the largest nest egg; it’s about creating a secure, sustainable income strategy that empowers the life you’ve designed across the other three pillars. In Canada, this traditionally rests on a three-legged stool:
- Government
Programs (CPP/QPP, OAS)
- Workplace
Pensions (Defined Benefit or Contribution plans)
- Personal
Savings (RRSPs, TFSAs, non-registered investments)
A robust plan optimizes all three sources. However, managing money in
retirement can be more complex than saving for it. Your greatest financial
worries are likely no longer market volatility alone, but unexpected expenses
and the potentially staggering costs of healthcare and long-term care.
Finances: The Interconnected Pillar
This is where the holistic “Four Pillars” approach proves essential. Your finances
don’t exist in a vacuum:
- Health
& Wealth: Good health protects your savings from medical
costs, while financial resources allow you to invest in better care, nutrition,
and fitness. Stress over money can also negatively impact your physical health.
- Family
& Finances: Generational generosity means your financial
plan must account for potential support to family members, while also preparing
for the possibility of needing care yourself.
- Purpose
& Finances: Your sense of purpose, whether it involves
travel, hobbies, or volunteering, has a budget. Your finances should enable
your passions, not restrict them.
The key is to plan holistically. Start by asking: “How do I want to live?”
Then, build your financial strategy to support that vision, accounting for:
- Long-Term
Care: With many facing years of needed care, consider how you might fund
it (savings, insurance, home equity).
- Family
Support: Have clear, communicated boundaries for financial
help to protect your own security.
- Inflation
& Longevity: Ensure your income streams are designed to
last 30+ years and keep pace with rising costs.
The goal of financial security in the New Retirement is freedom, the
freedom to focus on your health, nurture your relationships, and pursue your purpose
without constant money anxiety. It’s the pillar that supports the entire structure,
making the life you’ve imagined not just possible, but sustainable.
Next: My conclusion will tie all Four Pillars together and share the final
takeaway from the research.