Do-it-yourself pensions – Are immediate annuities the best life insurance products?

According to most recent researches, the Americans are living longer than ever. Though the idea of longer life is applicable to all of us, but when it comes to living a financially fit life, in most cases it is seen that the tradeoff is outliving all your retirement savings. As the health care costs in the US have risen out of control, most people are checking their insurance coverage, both health insurance and life insurance coverage. With the crippling costs of health care and the constant rise in inflation within the nation, you can get hold of a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA) as this may be a helpful income stream for all those who outlive their peers.

Though it seems that the pensions will be going off very soon, but if the retirees are looking for ways to substitute their retirement money, they can investigate the immediate annuities. All such insurance products are immediately expected to grow in popularity as the number of the traditional pensions will diminish in number. If you purchase an immediate annuity, it is almost like a monthly pension check. You just have to pay a lump sum to the annuity provider and in exchange of that he will provide you with a guaranteed income stream. These monthly payments will start off immediately 30 days after you’ve paid them that money.

Some important characteristics of immediate annuities

An immediate annuity is the way in which they can convert a small portion of your retirement fund into a steady income that will last as long as you may do. Have a look at some of the characteristics of immediate annuities.

* A single steady payment throughout your life: If you’re anxious thinking that you may live longer than your money, you can shrug off such tension if you get yourself immediate annuities. In exchange of a lump sum amount of money, you can get a steady income throughout your life.
* A simple strategy: The company that provides you with the annuity will thereby handle all the responsibilities of the investment and make sure that the correct decisions are being taken with your money.
* They’re low risk instruments: If you’re worried about the security of the funds, you can be sure that they are. The provider of the annuity is always financially secure and the funds are guaranteed by the assets of the company. You don’t even have to worry about any kind of fluctuations due to the vagaries of the financial markets.
* There are tax breaks: While funding them, if you’re using the tax-deferred instruments, you only pay the taxes on the monthly checks that you receive rather than the lump sum amount of money.

Before you purchase an immediate annuity, make sure you explore all the other alternatives like retirement income funds, total return portfolio or something like laddered bonds. Always see that you make the best choice to support your retirement years so that you don’t fall in trouble. This can be a good insurance instrument or financial investment through which you can earn a steady income.

This excellent article came out June 4th in the New York Times.  It is a great discussion of annuities and the retirement puzzle. It’s well worth a read and is quoted below.

The Annuity Puzzle
By RICHARD H. THALER
Published: June 4, 2011

IMAGINE a set of 65-year-old identical twins who plan to retire this summer after long careers. We’ll call them Dave and Ron. They have worked for different employers and have accumulated retirement benefits worth the same amount in dollars, but the benefits won’t be paid out the same way.

Dave can count on a traditional pension, paying $4,000 a month for the rest of his life. Ron, on the other hand, will receive his benefits in a lump sum that he must manage himself. Ron has a lot of choices, but all have consequences. For example, he could put the money into a conservative bond portfolio and by spending the interest and drawing down the principal he could also spend $4,000 a month. If Ron does that, though, he can expect to run out of money sometime around the age of 85, which the actuarial tables tell him he has a 30 percent chance of reaching. Or he could draw down only $3,000 a month. He wouldn’t have as much to live on each month, but his money should last until he reached 100.

Who is likely to be happier right now? Dave or Ron?

If this question seems a no-brainer, welcome to the club. Nearly everyone seems to prefer the certainty of Dave’s pension to Ron’s complex options.

But here’s the rub: Although people like Dave who have them tend to love them, old-fashioned “defined benefit” pensions are a vanishing breed. On the other hand, people like Ron — with defined-contribution plans like 401(k)s — can transform their uncertainty into a guaranteed monthly income stream that mirrors the payouts of a traditional pension plan. They can do so by buying an annuity — but when offered the chance, nearly everyone declines.

Economists call this the “annuity puzzle.” Using standard assumptions, economists have shown that buyers of annuities are assured more annual income for the rest of their lives, compared with people who self-manage their portfolios. One reason is that those who buy annuities and die early end up subsidizing those who die later.

So, why don’t more people buy annuities with their 401(k) dollars?

Here’s one part of the answer: Some people think that buying an annuity is in some way a bad deal for their heirs. But that need not be true. First of all, a retiree can decide to set aside some portion of a retirement nest egg for bequests, either immediately or at a later date. Second, if a retiree chooses to manage his or her own money, the heirs may face the following possibilities: Either they get financially “lucky” and the parent dies young, leaving a bequest, or they are financially “unlucky,” meaning that the parent lives a long life, and the heirs take on the burden of support. If you have aging parents, you might ask yourself how much you’d be willing to pay to insure that you will never have to figure out how to explain to your spouse, or whomever you may be living with, that your mother is moving in.

There are other explanations for the unpopularity of annuities, but I think two are especially important. The first is that buying one can be scary and complicated. Workers have become accustomed to having their employers narrow their set of choices to a manageable few, whether in their 401(k) plans or in their choice of health and life insurance providers. By contrast, very few 401(k)’s offer a specific annuity option that has been blessed by the company’s human resources department. Shopping for an annuity with hundreds of thousands of dollars at stake can be daunting, even for an economist.

The second problem is more psychological. Rather than viewing an annuity as providing insurance in the event that one lives past 85 or 90, most people seem to consider buying an annuity as a gamble, in which one has to live a certain number of years just to break even. But, as the example of Dave and Ron shows, it’s is the decision to self-manage your retirement wealth that is the risky one.

The most complex and unknowable part of that risk is in predicting how long you will live. Even if there are no medical advances in the coming years, according to the Social Security Administration, a man turning 65 now has almost a 20 percent chance of living to 90, and a woman at this age has nearly a one-third chance. This means that a husband who retires when his wife is 65 ought to include in his plans a one-third chance that his wife will live for 25 more years. (A “joint and survivor” annuity that pays until both members of a couple die is the only way I know for those who are not wealthy to confidently solve this problem.)

An annuity can also help people with another important decision: when to retire. It’s hard to have any idea of how much money is enough to finance an appropriate lifestyle in retirement. But if a lump sum is translated into a monthly income, it’s much easier to determine whether you have enough put away to afford to stop working. If you decide, for example, that you can get by on 70 percent of preretirement income, you can just keep working until you have accrued that level of benefits.

IN the absence of annuities, there is reason to worry that many workers are having trouble with this decision. Over the last 60 years, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the average age at which Americans retire has trended downward by more than five years, from 66.9 to 61.6. Of course, there is nothing wrong with choosing to retire a bit earlier, but over the same period, live expectancy has risen by four years and will likely continue to climb, meaning that retirees have to fund at least an additional nine years of retirement. Those who manage their own retirement assets can only hope that they have saved enough.

Annuities may make some of these issues easier to solve, but few Americans actually choose to buy them. Whether the cause is a possibly rational fear of the viability of insurance companies, or misconceptions about whether annuities increase rather than decrease risk, the market hasn’t figured out how to sell these products successfully. Might there be a role for government? Tune in next time for some thoughts on that question.

 

The annuity puzzle article originally appears here.

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