Another new research article is now available. This article mostly serves as a rather extended background for a subsequent article I will discuss in a day or two.
The article for today is, "Choosing a Retirement Income Strategy: Outcome Measures and Best Practices." After clicking on that link you do need
to follow through and click two more links and then you will have the
PDF of the article.
This article gives background as now I am getting geared up to look at more complex retirement income strategies that the usual constant inflation-adjusted withdrawal amount strategy of the classic safe withdrawal rate studies.
(As I side note, for a lot of publishing outlets I aim toward, I should use the word "client" in the article, but the do-it-yourselfers in the audience can think of yourself as your own client.)
The race is on to build frameworks to evaluate retirement income
strategies for individuals facing various post-retirement circumstances.
Retirement income planning is a complicated process in which retirees
must balance competing tradeoffs (maximize spending, protect from income
shortfalls, leave a bequest) over an uncertain lifespan.
After
providing an overview of the basic building blocks of retirement income
strategies, this article seeks to explain best practices, highlight
potential missteps and problems which may arise, clarify areas where
controversies and disagreements remain, and suggest further enhancements
and modifications to make retirement income frameworks as useful as
possible.
The best practices described here include a description of the
approaches and products to be included in a complete framework, the use
of simulations or scenario testing as a way to understand how
strategies respond in a variety of market circumstances, the need to
connect asset market return assumptions to current market conditions
rather than historical averages, the need to apply consistent fees
across strategies, the need to distinguish how outcomes will differ when
using either survival probabilities or fixed horizons, and other
matters.
The article concludes with a discussion of evaluation criteria,
which can be subdivided into three general groupings. These include
measures focusing on downside spending in bad luck cases, measures
focusing on overall or upside spending or translating spending into the
value it provides, and measures taking into account remaining assets at
the end of the retirement period.
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