Vancouver Sun

RETIRING ALONE? HERE’S HOW TO MAKE IT SAFER — FINANCIALL­Y

Planning to stay single can be a good hedge against long-term risks, Jason Heath says.

- Jason Heath is a fee-only Certified Financial Planner (CFP) and income tax profession­al for Objective Financial Partners Inc. in Toronto.

A survey released earlier this year from TD Wealth entitled “Retiring Solo” found that 47 per cent of single Canadians over the age of 40 are concerned about outliving their retirement savings. This fear probably is not much different from that of many Canadian couples, but what is different is how many Canadians will be navigating retirement on their own compared to previous generation­s.

According to Statistics Canada, in 1951, only 7.4 per cent of households were one-person households. That number has nearly quadrupled to 28.2 per cent currently. Part of this increase is because Canadians are getting married later. But part of it is because they may not get married at all. Or because divorce is on the rise, including an increase in grey divorce among seniors. And as longevity increases, the healthiest of retirees are living longer retirement­s on their own if their partners die young.

One of my primary concerns for single people planning for retirement is the risk of the unforeseen derailing their long-term plans. While having an emergency fund is important — whether cash, liquid investment­s or a low-interest line of credit — these are short-term strategies and there are other ways to insure against long-term financial risks.

Consumers and insurance agents tend to focus more on life insurance than living benefit insurance.

For a single person, life insurance may be entirely unnecessar­y, given the primary objective for it is to provide for dependents on death. Single people are often their own primary dependent, meaning an insurance payout during their lives is probably more important than an insurance payout if they die.

One third of Canadians will have a period of 90 days or more during which they are disabled before the age of 65. One in seven over the age of 35 will be disabled for over five years. Disability insurance pays a monthly benefit if you are disabled and unable to work and earn an income. It is effectivel­y income replacemen­t insurance. It can be essential to stay on track for retirement in the event of a disability, especially for single people.

When it comes to retirement planning, TD’s survey found the three biggest fears for single people were rising daily living expenses, not having enough money for necessitie­s, and increasing health-care costs.

All three of these fears focus on not having enough money in retirement. These concerns are not much different from those that couples have about retiring. In my experience, I have found that these fears are surprising­ly constant regardless of how much money someone has saved as well.

I feel the three most important ways to personally mitigate these risks for yourself are: 1) stocks; 2) pensions; and 3) planning.

Stocks are scary to some investors. They are volatile. They are risky. But that is exactly the reason to own them. More volatile investment­s with higher risk are priced in such a way that their future return is also higher. People are willing to pay more for a sure thing — like a guaranteed investment certificat­e (GIC) — and therefore accept low interest rates from the bank in return.

Stocks are also a good hedge against inflation in retirement. If prices go up, chances are corporate profits are going up, as are stock markets. Stocks are an important tool to help single retirees avoid outliving their retirement savings.

Pensions are coveted by retirees. But fewer Canadians have access to them. That does not, however, mean that retirees cannot increase or even create pension income on their own. The Canada Pension Plan (CPP) and Old Age Security (OAS) pensions can be deferred as late as age 70. Retirees who defer their pension start dates past 65 are rewarded with higher payments for life.

CPP deferral results in 8.4 per cent more for every year of deferral plus inflation (roughly two per cent more per year). For OAS, the increase is 7.2 per cent plus annual inflation. These higher payments are indexed to inflation for life, providing a degree of protection against the higher retirement costs (inflation) most retirees say they fear.

Increased CPP, OAS and annuity income can help insure single retirees against the risk of living too long, since all three sources continue to make monthly payments for the rest of a recipient’s life.

So, while retirees are worried about rising daily living expenses, not having enough money for necessitie­s, and increasing health-care costs, these risks are less pronounced for those who die young. It is the single retirees who live to 100 who have the biggest risk, and CPP, OAS, and annuity income may help mitigate this risk.

Finally, planning is important for single retirees. Financial planning can help them check off all the boxes and get their finances in order. Retirement planning can help them set targets for monthly savings and eventually monthly spending. Estate planning is also important for single people, since the typical decision to name a spouse as beneficiar­y and appoint them in legal documents is not an option.

I think the government needs to help single retirees as well. Single CPP recipients are arguably discrimina­ted against given their retirement benefit dies with them. A surviving spouse, on the other hand, is entitled to a CPP survivor benefit. Obviously, contributi­ons by single retirees are helping fund the benefits paid when someone loses their spouse.

In addition, the government allows pension income splitting between spouses. Up to 50 per cent of eligible pension income, including defined benefit (DB) pension income and registered retirement income fund (RRIF) withdrawal­s can be allocated from the recipient’s tax return to their spouse’s tax return. The result is less tax payable for the couple.

Single retirees have all their income taxed on one tax return. This means a single retiree may pay significan­tly more tax than a couple with the identical “family” income, even if most or even all that couple’s income comes from one of the two spouses.

Financiall­y, I think it is important for single people to plan to be single, but hope, if they want one, for a relationsh­ip. If you plan, instead of hope, for a relationsh­ip, it could mean you come up short of financial independen­ce in the long run if that relationsh­ip never happens. Or it could limit your relationsh­ip options to someone who is welloff financiall­y.

On that basis, if you are single and planning for retirement, consider some of the singlespec­ific implicatio­ns. But plan financiall­y to stay single, so that meeting Mr. or Mrs. Right is that much more of a bonus if it happens.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? For single people, stocks, pensions and planning are key to mitigate the risk of not having enough money in retirement, writes Jason Heath. He explains that stocks, which can have higher returns, are an important tool to help them avoid outliving their retirement savings.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O For single people, stocks, pensions and planning are key to mitigate the risk of not having enough money in retirement, writes Jason Heath. He explains that stocks, which can have higher returns, are an important tool to help them avoid outliving their retirement savings.

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