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retirement in the 1970s, the typical income replacement rate was about 65% of pre-retirement income, meaning, if you earned $100,000 a year, you would expect to need $65,000 each year in retirement to maintain your current lifestyle. The $65,000 was covered by those three legs of the stool: Social Security, private pension/retirement plan, and personal savings—mostly, if not all, the Social Security and private pensions.

      Using the three-legged-stool example made it easy to understand how much you would need to save for retirement because two of the three legs were static and easily quantifiable. That is, you knew if you retired at 65, you would receive a fixed amount per month in Social Security and a fixed amount per month in pension. These figures may have grown slightly with inflation, but for the most part these were fixed figures. Most individuals entering retirement had little to no debt, so their day-to-day expenses were relatively low as compared to their pre-retirement needs. The only variable was what you contributed toward you own retirement income. For a great number of people, pension and/or Social Security was enough to cover everything.

      So, today, most of us are left with one source of retirement savings—ourselves. Not only have two stool legs of support been removed, but our planning must now replace 80% of our pre-retirement income because we are living longer, healthcare is more expensive, and our personal debt—either by way of mortgages or student loans for ourselves or our children—tends to stay with us a great deal longer and often into retirement.

      One of the greatest financial accounts created was the 401(k), or the defined-contribution plan. As we previously discussed, this was created to replace many corporate private pensions and allow individuals to save pre-tax dollars toward their retirement. What most people don't know is that it was never created to be the main source of employee retirement savings it is today. The accidental retirement revolution began in 1978 when Congress passed the Revenue Act of 1978. The Act included a provision, Section 401(k), that gave employees a tax-free way to take money from bonuses or stock options and save without paying taxes, deferring them to some future date. A gentleman named Ted Benna, a benefits consultant at the Johnson Companies, is today regarded as the father of the 401(k). When working with a client who wanted to provide benefits to its employees and also incentivize its employees to save, Ted Benna advised that the new Section 401(k) of the Revenue Act of 1978 could be the solution they needed. There wasn't anything explicit or hidden in the code that said the modern version of the 401(k) could be used as an Employer Deferred Compensation Plan, but there also wasn't anything in the code that said it couldn't. Through some creativity and a bit of a fluke in helping his client, Ted Benna created the first 401(k) plan.

      Based on Benna's work, in 1981 the IRS issued rules that allowed employees to contribute to accounts through salary deductions; this created efficiency and scale and jumpstarted the widespread rollout of the plans in the early 1980s (Source: 401(k)—Forty Years Later, Ted Benna).

      There was a great deal of concern that pensions would go away, and in fact they did, not because of the 401(k), but in spite of it. In just a few short years from its creation, large companies began to offer the 401(k) plans, mainly because it was less expensive than funding pensions and was more predictable to fund. Over the years the contribution amounts an employee is able to save through deferral have increased, including a catch-up contribution for those over 50. Starting in 2020, the total employee deferral can be up to $19,500 with a catch-up of $6,500; so those over 50 can put as much as $26,000 into their 401(k) accounts.

      This is a great way to start saving, but it cannot be the only place one saves toward retirement. In the above example, savings of 5% with a company match earning $50,000 over 35 years with a 6% return will get you approximately $538,000 to use for retirement income. This is a nice nest egg, but if it is your only leg of the stool, it most likely can't sustain your entire retirement income needs. Instead, save more, save early, and save often (more on that later).

      As I write this, I am a 45-year-old financial advisor. As a financial advisor, I see that even many educated people with great means are not in control of their own financial situations and their spending, and savings are not on track to being able to retire comfortably. This could be because we as a nation simply have not focused on teaching the basics of becoming financially healthy—honestly, because most of us never had to. Now, as I look to the future, I fear not as much for my mom or her peers, or even for myself, but for my son and his friends, cousins, and peers—for our children and the next generation. Today we are faced with an unprecedented culmination of events. As a nation, we are woefully unprepared for the effects this will have on our schools and communities. The three-legged stool has been flipped on its head by a three-headed monster:

       Personal debt or consumer debt is at $13.86 trillion, primarily school loans, which are second only to mortgage debt.

       National debt: according to the New York Times just the interest payments on the US national debt will overtake Medicaid costs in 2020 and the Department of Defense budget in 2023.

       Decreased corporate and government support for retirement: in 2018, for the first time since 1982, Social Security will pay out more than it takes in, with a projected date to run out by 2034.

      Our country's financial foundation is no longer stable and the only way to fix it for ourselves and future generations is to take charge and DIY (do it yourself). The financial changes our country is faced with make it so important for us to shift our thinking from allowing our children to take minimal personal responsibility and acquire limited financial knowledge, to consciously increasing the level of education our children receive relative to financial matters. The next few generations don't have the luxury of waiting until age 50 or 60 to pay attention to their financial wellness and money management habits.

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