Posts Tagged ‘start savings for retirement early’

Stay at one workplace long enough to receive retirement benefits

Sometimes you might need to stay at one workplace long enough to receive retirement benefits. In some companies, you may have to work for 5 years to become eligible to receive retirement benefits. Employers now do offer retirement plans such as 401K when you first take the job as part of incentives. The problems that [...]

Does your employer offer a retirement plan?

If your employer offers a retirement plan, join it as soon as you can and contribute as much as the plan allows. People tend to distrust the stock and mutual funds during bad economical times. But the best time to invest is in bad economy and when the stocks are low. Even in a time [...]

Retirement investing requires discipline

When it comes to retirement investing, it’s not about how much you put in once in awhile, it’s all about saving a set amount constantly and regularly. When you decide on your monthly contribution amount, set it at a level that you comfortable. Don’t try to put in so much in the beginning and stop [...]

Women usually invest more conservatively than men

If you find yourself choosing more conservative ways of putting your retirement, you’re not alone. Women usually invest more conservatively than men. There’s nothing wrong with that. The rule is to start early and invest regularly. Choose carefully where you put your money and learn how to make your investments grow. The simplest retirement investing [...]

Women can expect to live another 20 years in retirement

On average, a female retiring at age 65 can expect to live another 19 to 20 years. That’s at least 3 years longer than men who retire at the same age. Which makes it more important to plan retirement early and start saving early. Savings can increase your chances of having enough money to last [...]

Few women participate in employer sponsored retirement plans

There are roughly 62 million wage and salaried women between the age 21 and 64 who are working in the United States. However, even before the economic trouble and high unemployment, only45 percent of the employed women participated in a retirement plan. Many people don’t realize the importance of compounding which simply means the earlier [...]

Women are more likely to work in part-time jobs that don’t qualify for a retirement plan

Because women are more likely than men to interrupt their careers to start a family and to take care of aging family members, they are often more likely to work in part-time jobs. As a result, these part-time jobs don’t qualify for a retirement plan. Thus many women work fewer years and contribute less towards [...]