The National - News

All aboard to enjoy the ride with the Third Age Economy baby boomers

- NIMA ABU WARDEH Nima Abu Wardeh is a broadcast journalist, columnist and blogger. Share her journey on finding-nima.com

“Iwas expecting holidays, experience­s, fun – instead there were Zimmer frames and stairlifts,” a woman told her friends, as much laughter ensued.

I was sitting behind a gaggle of grey-haired poster girls for the Third Age Economy. They had occupied the front row atop a London doubledeck­er red bus and were catching up while winding through the capital on their way to a chosen spot for lunch. I wasn’t eavesdropp­ing – no need – they were very loud as they talked about the trips and experience­s they’d had since they last met.

The one doing the talking was reporting back on an exhibition she’d been to, aimed at the saltand-pepper dollar. Except they got it very wrong. Baby boomers have grown older yes, but they’re healthy, wealthy and living life to the full.

The third age is defined as the period in life of active retirement, following middle age.Two concepts need to be revisited in that one sentence – “retirement” and “middle age”.

Haven’t you heard? Sixty is the new 40. Mandatory retirement age aside, the money is with the mature crowd, and there will be more of them.

According to the World Bank, the UAE is one of the top 10 countries globally that will experience the largest increase in the share of people aged 60 and over between 2000 and 2050 – rising more than 22 per cent.

We’re all getting older, so what does this mean for you? Will you be starting new experience­s during your third age or worrying about money? Three out of five expats in the UAE won’t have enough funds to maintain their desired lifestyle in retirement. This according to a survey conducted by Guardian Wealth Management, released in 2016.

My hope is that you’ve been putting money aside to spend when you no longer earn. To encourage you to keep it up, I’d like to share the stories of a few people I know, and how they’ve set themselves up.

Greg owns mooring alongside one of London’s boroughs. He has amassed six floating homes – they include Dutch barges, a fishing boat and a curiosity he’s converted into two studio flats. He owns everything outright and earns around Dh550,000 a year from rent. He has no outgoings other than council tax and upkeep, so he’s sorted. If he chooses to sell up, that would be about Dh10 million in the bank, and that’s just for the moorings. He had to pay cash for everything over the years, as this isn’t the sort of thing banks lend money for.

Others I have spoken to are not so adventurou­s, but are in the black; one has three separate pensions kicking in, he’s done everything by the book in terms of paying into funds, and is now sitting pretty.

Another is selling his share in a business – a risky route to take – but the structure of the business he coowns means he didn’t have to rely on a payout as he had dividends for years, and would have kept receiving them had the company not sold.

This last person is also fortunate in terms of timing – he has just crossed 60 and he’s free to do as he pleases. But instead of a lifetime of holidaying, he has consultanc­ies lined up – he wants to stay active and involved.

If you’ve played it right, you’re on your way to being able to do as you wish once your legal working age passes you by in the UAE. Elsewhere in the world, companies relentless­ly chasing youth spending are waking up to the fact that they are often broke and that spending power resides with the over-50s. It’s not just about spending more, but doing more too. If you’re fit, financiall­y astute and adventurou­s, you won’t want to while away your years on a cruise to nowhere.

A friend of the women on the bus has started an exquisitel­y furnished holiday let business. The complaint from her friends was her attention to detail, like having a beautiful poem left open on the bedside table, meant they were too scared to truly let go in case they damaged something. A tea stain on a tablecloth, or the poetry book, had to be avoided.

She is one of a growing band of older entreprene­urs. Some take on more convention­al routes, becoming landlords and buying properties to let out – all the while learning, doing, creating and earning too.

The Third Age Economy is an economic powerhouse. Companies and government­s are learning to ignore it at their peril. Save up for the fun you’ll be having later on.

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