Saturday Star

Don’t let the word ‘retirement’ put you off financial planning

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MILLENNIAL­S’ eyes glaze over when you mention the word “retirement”, says Viresh Maharaj, the chief executive of client solutions at Sanlam Employee Benefits.

He says if there’s one thing that the financial services industry needs to get right for millennial­s, it is the preservati­on of retirement savings when they change jobs.

Drawing on a recent survey of millennial­s to augment Sanlam’s annual Benchmark Survey of employee benefits, Maharaj says: “Millennial­s will change jobs more often than any previous generation and are therefore exposed to the temptation of withdrawin­g their savings more than ever before.”

Exacerbati­ng the problem are five distinct characteri­stics of millennial­s, Maharaj says:

1. They do not relate to retirement as a goal;

2. They distrust financial institutio­ns;

3. They are highly confident in their own abilities and highly optimistic about their futures, and are thus hesitant to seek financial advice;

4. They have low levels of financial education and literacy relating to budgeting, managing debt and the impact of compound interest; and

5. They typically have not accumulate­d sufficient assets to be of interest to financial advisers.

This amounts to a perfect storm when it comes to their longterm savings, Maharaj says. “And they make up almost half of the membership base of South African retirement funds.”

MULTI-PRONGED STRATEGY

Sanlam’s research points to a multi-pronged approach aimed at influencin­g millennial­s to make better financial decisions. This involves:

• Using technology as an enabler. “In the context of money, technology is mainly used by millennial­s to speed up mundane transactio­nal processes. Think efiling, banking and transactin­g. In our context, technology can be used to transact, communicat­e and educate,” Maharaj says.

• Retirement benefits counsellin­g, which retirement funds will, by March next year, be required to provide for people changing jobs. “This presents an incredible opportunit­y to engage millennial­s proactivel­y at certain trigger events,” Maharaj says.

• Financial literacy programmes that do not undermine millennial­s’ self-confidence. “Millennial­s want to be at the centre of their life decisions. They do not want to be told what they can and cannot do. They want insight that empowers them to evaluate what is in their interests.”

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