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    The Benefits of Staying Put in Retirement

    I like reading stories on the "best cities" in America to retire in. I always learn something new about different cities as I peruse the lists, such as Kiplinger's 10 Great Retirement Cities in the U.S. But I'm usually seeking ideas for places to visit sometime -- not necessarily places to live.

    One reason these lists are so seductive is that they reflect popular visions of the "good life" of retirement: An aging worker says goodbye to her workmates for the last time, sells her home and moves hundreds (if not thousands) of miles away to a new abode -- preferably in a temperate climate.

    The retire-and-move ideal became commonplace during the post–World War II decades: the 1950s and '60s. Poverty rates among the elderly had plummeted thanks to the advent of Social Security in 1935, and Medicare gave retirees' wallets a boost in 1965. Many retirees enjoyed a monthly check from their employer's defined-benefit pension plan. Older Americans had enough financial independence to develop a distinct lifestyle as they migrated en masse from Snowbelt cities to Sunbelt communities, inspiring the vision of retirement as a leisurely life of golf in the morning and cocktails on the patio in the evening. "In the past, such an experience of retirement was limited to the wealthy few that could afford it," Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist Dora L. Costa wrote in The Evolution of Retirement. "Now, it is an option available to the majority of workers."

    But is it really a widely available option anymore? Reality is increasingly diverging from those popular images of the good life. Americans of all ages -- including the elderly -- are relocating less following the steep decline in home values after the housing bubble burst in 2006. A mere 11.6% of U.S. residents moved between 2010 and 2011, the lowest rate since 1948, according to the Census Bureau. Migration among aging Americans to classic Sunbelt magnets Phoenix and Las Vegas is down as well.

    The number of older Americans continues to grow, but they are increasingly "aging in place." For instance, Georgia's senior population -- those age 65 and older -- will swell by 40% between 2010 and 2020, a handful of scholars from the Brookings Institution predict in Getting Current: Recent Demographic Trends in Metropolitan America. All but 4% of that increase will come from seniors aging in place, they say.

    The shift toward staying put runs even deeper than the depression in home values. The leading edge of the massive baby-boomer generation has reached the traditional age of retirement of 65. The youngest boomers will cross that age milestone in 18 years. Boomers in the aggregate have accumulated little savings, especially after the devastating financial impact of two bear markets and two recessions in less than a decade (with the prospect of another economic and financial bust looming if the European sovereign debt crisis spirals out of control). The savings dearth is the impetus for the standard retirement advice these days: Work well into your traditional retirement years.

    Yes, you may be ready to say goodbye to full-time employment. Enough is enough. But keeping a part-time job or a less stressful full-time position would allow you to delay tapping your retirement savings and harness the power of compound interest for a few more years. More important, you could wait to file for Social Security. The Social Security benefit increases every year you wait to file between ages 62 and 70. Between ages 66 and 70, the boost is an inflation-adjusted 8%. That's a tough hurdle for even the best Wall Street money managers to match eight years in a row.

    If you work longer, that will probably influence where you retire. For most people, it makes sense to stay where they are because they can more easily find jobs and volunteer opportunities by tapping their established network of nearby friends, family members and acquaintances. A cottage industry of academic research convincingly shows that some 50% or more of all jobs come through informal channels -- connections to friends, families and colleagues. Experience tells us that having such a network makes it far easier for a soon-to-be-retiree to get a part-time consulting contract, an opportunity to use hard-earned know-how at a local business, or a chance to draw on a private-sector background to help out a nonprofit venture.

    The drawback to taking the traditional route in old age from the Twin Cities to Orlando; Los Angeles to Phoenix; Washington, D.C., to Winston-Salem; and so on is that valuable community networks are suddenly useless.

    It's always possible to create new networks, but that takes time -- a scarce commodity among the aged. From a "work longer" perspective, it often pays to stay put and tap your resources.

    So staying local during the traditional retirement years benefits you financially in two major ways. First, nurturing the different networks in your community is truly a critical investment -- the way stocks, bonds and other types of financial savings are important to a secure old age. Second, you have a good vantage point for researching ways to improve your current home, rather than looking into possible digs in far-away climes across the country. For instance, do your bathrooms need remodeling for safety as you age? How about the kitchen? Or would it be smarter to downsize to a nearby condo or even a continuing-care community? What's the local place where you can best see yourself working, living and aging gracefully?

    It's striking how many communities across America are embracing a "local" sensibility, from local food and locavore diets to local entrepreneurs and buy-local movements. As aging Americans work longer -- out of financial need or simply to remain engaged -- their networks should be added to that list of local benefits.

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    54 comments

    • Charlie  •  Greenville, South Carolina  •  3 months ago
      Wish you damyankes would stay up north. You are dying here and using up all the cemetery space!!!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  5 months ago
      Well I'm 55 and I say retire as soon as you can, you never know what your health will be in 5 or 10 years. I say move to some where else, experience a new adventure. Move to Arizona or Ecuador and take a chance of a new adventure. Take Social Security as soon as you can and spend with in your means and make it work. Life is to short, my dad always said retire as soon as you can and don't look back. Few people say, I wish I had worked longer. You can't buy time, so enjoy the retirement you deserve.
      • Smilin' Jack 5 months ago
        Right on Brother - I was "invited" to retire when I was 60 and I'm glad I did. Life has an "expiration date" Don't waste your time at the office if there is even the slightest reason to leave. Live on the cheap and make it a challenge. I went from a high five figure income to $35K/yr. If I need more, I withdrawn as little as I require to get by.. If you wait until you have enough money to retire (85% of your salary) your heirs will raise a toast to your frugality
      • . 5 months ago
        I agree to retire as soon as possible. I do not agree to take SS at 62. If you have a spouse that draws on your SS you will cut her benefit as well as yours. For me, I will draw from my 4% 401K and let my SS increase by 7% until I reach 66.
      • Yahoo User 1 5 months ago
        My last employer retired me almost 3 years ago at age 59. I really do enjoy doing whatever I want to do every day. I still don't have time to do everything I enjoy.
    • Jerry  •  5 months ago
      I agree with the person who says "retire as soon as you can"!! You never know what your health will be when you are 70. A good friend retired at 55 and I talked at length when he was 65 and he said" there are alot of things I just couldn't do now or even WANT to do; so GLAD that I retired at 55!! People are crazy to retire at 65 or 70 unless they are poor and just can't!!
      • Ron 5 months ago
        Absolutely!! If your finances can allow it, retire as early as you can. I know of too many who stayed on the job only to die on the job. I retired at 56 and I am now 58 and dont regret it at all retiring early. Find a nice hobby like woodcrafts , metal detecting, boating, etc, and enjoy what time you have left on this earth.
      • William M 5 months ago
        You folks are making some sense. I am 52 and my nest egg is sizeable enough that I could even rent a studio apartment in Tucson and ride my bicycle around that city for years before breaking into my social security. But my only social life is work. I have no kids. My siblings are older and in different states. I am tired of air travel (frequent flier for years). There are no jobs that interest me for now in Tucson and I figure they won't exist for me for another five years.
      • LifeInThe1970s80s90s 4 months ago
        I plan on working hard into my 40s and early 50s and see if I can gradually ease into retirement. I might just work part time (twice a week to keep from getting bored and sick). This Xer doesn't want to end up like a lot of you Boomer folks.
    • Lawrence  •  5 months ago
      How can anyone call Social Security an entitlement program when you are forced to pay into it your entire working career? Those that think the monthly payment will cover their expenses and Healthcare are nuts and must be living in a cave. That’s another conversation, but as far as I am concerned it is my money, I paid in to the program and I deserve it!
      • Zelmo 5 months ago
        You get your contributions back in about 3.5 years... so thereafter it's not your money coming in--so goes the "entitlement" thought...
      • Tim 5 months ago
        The reason Social Security is called an entitlement because you draw more than quadruple what you pay into. And no, SS was never intended to be a primary source of retirement income. I'm 41 and I contribute all I can to my 401k, because odds are, Social Security will not be available when I reach retirement age. And for heaven's sake, GET OUT OF CREDIT CARD DEBT!!. Those who have perpetual rotating balances simply rob themselves of a comfortable retirement.
      • Mike 5 months ago
        Hey Irish, don't listen to these clowns. When they call SS an entitlement, it means they aren't even close to retiring. To them its better if we had a Solyent Green program in this country. That's where the old and dead are used for food to feed the living. Ain't that right tea bagger. Are there no workhouses, no county poor farms, no debtors prisons to put the excess population. Old age is no reason for putting a hand in a man's pocket
    • ZIEH LEINE!  •  5 months ago
      Going thousands of miles away. Expat, so I can actually LIVE, not just survive. Good luck to all!
      • Secret Name 5 months ago
        I'm doing the same..Good luck to you!
    • Incisive Rambler  •  5 months ago
      I disagree. I think the time to really explore life is in retirement. My suggestion for retirees is Costa Rica, Argentina (not been there), Greece (seems like it could be interesting), SE Asia,
      Nepal, Phillipines or a houseboat. Don't stay home and be a bore.
      • Getreal. 5 months ago
        What about great healthcare? And no Medicare for expats.
      • Federal Retiree 4 months ago
        Been down here in Costa Rica for more than 4 years now. Not a resident and don't plan to become one. I return to my small California home several times/year, but only stay for a few weeks. Also visit Nicaragua, Mexico, Panama, Columbia, etc. Learned to speak almost-fluent Spanish, which is supposed to be good for my 62 y/o brain. Retirement life is wonderful and anything but boring. I retired at age 50, but wish I had done it soner.
    • Lawrence  •  5 months ago
      I am going to Retire and move for one reason, I can afford to live where I currently do when I retire. So as much as I hate to leave my friends and family, I will move to a location I can afford. Thanks to the housing bust the property values in the Sunbelt are affordable, so the biggest decision for me will be Taxes.
    • Scott  •  5 months ago
      As a loner, I don't want or need 'new social networks.' The beautiful North County- with low population, natural beauty, and peace and quiet is for me. A plus is that the property is cheap and he taxes are low.
    • Peter  •  5 months ago
      I'm tired of shoveling snow in the winter, last year two storms with over two feet each time.....I have been going to Mexico for a couple of weeks in the winter. I may make it longer and go for a couple of months. The Mexicans are very nice, the prices are great, the Walmart is better than in the US, and the climate is very comfortable for this 70 year old guy. .........
    • HowardH  •  5 months ago
      For health reasons, my wife and I will retire in AZ. The housing market there is depressed, so we're buying ASAP. When the desert gets too hot, we'll take our trailer north and do a little exploring. Not retiring until I'm 70 is a given. Look at Federal tax-free ETF's: NEA, NIO, IQT, NMO, NPI, NPT, NQU, NXZ, IIM, IMT, MQT and quit being screwed by your bank. Values will fluctuate, but dividend yields are very stable.
    • WilhemenaCooker  •  5 months ago
      i like living in a no-income tax state... why fools continue to live in CA, NY, IL, and other states infested by Libtards is beyond me
    • J  •  5 months ago
      The key to a happy retirement is financial independence. If you have that, you can do what you want. For some, that may mean staying put. For others, relocation to the sunbelt might be just the thing. When I retired, I moved to a tropical island on the other side of the world. Today, I'm back in the USA for half the year and then I travel for the other half of the year. But I'm thinking again about a move to the tropical beaches. How do I do it? I'm not a prisoner of my "stuff," and I live within my means. It also helps to be healthy and have health insurance that's good anywhere in the world.
    • MarkS  •  5 months ago
      I retired at age 52.
      I now live in a $230K home.
      I do not have HVAC. No one around here does. Only one small propane heater.
      My electric bill averages about $18/ month. Water bill, $6/month.
      My property taxes were $63 this year.
      I earn 8.5% on sovereign bonds. Tax free.
      I paid $300 for a colonoscopy in September.
      I paid $35 for an ER visit (I thought I had broken my knee). Zero wait time.
      Crime is virtually non-existent here.
      Tomatoes are less than a dollar per pound.
      There are more cultural/arts events here than I can shake a stick at.
      Tons of great restaurants/bars all withing walking distance.
      Taxis are $2.25 to go anywhere in the city.
      Beer is $3.15 a six pack. Vodka is $4.75/liter.
      Life is wonderful.
      Guess where I live?
    • blame yourself  •  5 months ago
      Your neigborhood is either improving or declining.

      Society in general is certainly in decline.

      Make certain your area is not the pace setter and poster child for hope and change. Move from it if it is.

      If your neigbors all suck, its probable that you suck too .

      Find people with like values and stay near them.

      Select the worst of the best not the best of the worst or you will be a target and surrounded by anger and disapointment.
    • herb  •  5 months ago
      I'm allmost 70 and think that having a small farm helped a lot to get out of the 7:0 to 3:30
      welding was a good income I could live any where, I choose not to live where poisonest snakes and spiders were common, and animals give there food a little squeeze before
      swallow ya hole. I bought this place 80000 moved the house 400 foot back off the hyway and
      increased the value 5 times, now I lost 2-5th the value so what! I still have a nice green house and am able to grow my foods, sell hay and make blackberry wine.12 apple trees. catfish pond. 2 Salmon rivers 4miles and10 miles. motorhome out in feb.and a little of march. Not moving nope i'll visit Arazona and prospect for gold but. No moving nada no income tax in this state
    • Barney Rubble  •  5 months ago
      So... Georgia boomers will "age in place?" If they already live in a temperate climate, why would they move? DUH!! Retirees in GA, or anywhere in the south, are not likely to move to northern Minnesota upon retiring. Brilliant deduction Chris. If I lived in any of the LibDem controlled states (IL, MI, NY, CA with crippling taxes, union thugs controlling the cities and schools, illegal invaders swamping social services, dopers and gangstas' running wild every night, and impossible traffic clogging the streets, south Texas with no state income tax or Louisiana, would look really good. Ya'll come on down and bring those retirement checks, ya' hear? We'll put some shrimp on the barbie for ya'..... and tee off around 9 ish most mornings....
    • richardt  •  5 months ago
      It is cheaper than ever to buy in the sun communities. The only drawback is how states like Florida tax their part-time residents. Taxes and insurance are far too high.
    • blame yourself  •  5 months ago
      stay where you are and vote yourself into retirement by voting for lower tax rates and smaller government-yourteachers and city workers dont need 2 milions dollar packages
    • Steve  •  5 months ago
      Hey Johnnie P......what's with this "entitlement" new-speak spin crapp?.....I paid into SSec and Medicare since 1965....still do...isn't that what's called a LONG term investment? Not my fault SS paid for a lot of the Vietnam war (It cost 2/3 WW2 in today's dollars) What do YOU want to do with what's left of the money I put in?....that benefits little Johnnie-boy? Since you don't say, maybe that's why you're so sick....it's not good for one to hold things in, ya know?
    • Mike  •  5 months ago
      This author is full of it. I live near a lake in an old fishin cabin during the summer and head for the sunbelt in the winter. I hate cold! With a little research and a little planning you could do the same. You have to cut back a little. If you can, sell the house and move to a smaller place in your town or near a rec site. Then find a place in the Southwest, in Texas or wherever its warm. The clown who wrote this doesn't understand the fact that you can cut back and live the good life. Don't believe this article.

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