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Robert Brokamp

๐Ÿ‘ค Speaker
2288 total appearances
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Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
Advocate for a Better 401(k) and Tax-Smart Charitable Giving

I'm Robert Brokamp.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
Advocate for a Better 401(k) and Tax-Smart Charitable Giving

Merry Thanksgiving, everybody.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

why it might make sense to pay taxes today to reduce taxes in retirement, and how long you should expect to live.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

That and more on this Saturday Personal Finance edition of Motley Fool Money.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

I'm Robert Brokamp, but my nickname around these parts is Bro, which you'll hear during my conversation this week with Fool contributor Dan Kaplinger about the many benefits of Roth retirement accounts.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

But first, let's look back on some recent news in money.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

Let's start with a question.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

How long will a typical 65-year-old live?

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

Go ahead, come up with an estimate in your head.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

If you guessed 19 years for a male and 22 years for a female, you're in the less than a third of people who got the question right in a survey from the TIAA Institute and the Global Financial Literacy Excellence Center, and highlighted in the current issue of Kiplinger's magazine.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

The largest percentage of respondents underestimated life expectancy, and one in four chose the I don't know option.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

But understanding how long you could live is an important variable when calculating whether you're saving enough to retire, when you can retire, and how much you can spend in retirement while not running out of money.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

When analyzing your retirement plan, you probably shouldn't assume the average life expectancy.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

After all, half of people live longer.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

Plus, if you're listening to this podcast, you likely have above-average education and above-average wealth, two factors that are strongly correlated without living the averages.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

You're also probably really good-looking, but that's just the cherry on top.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

Nowadays, a reasonable default option for a retirement plan is living to age 95, since there's a 20-25% chance that one member of a 65-year-old couple will live to their mid-90s.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

But to get a more individualized estimate of your life expectancy and to see your odds of making it to various ages, visit longevityillustrator.org, a tool co-created by the American Academy of Actuaries and the Society of Actuaries.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

And speaking of wealth, our next item comes from a post on X from Mark Zandi, the chief economist for Moody's Analytics.

Motley Fool Hidden Gems Investing
The Many Reasons to Roth, and How Long You'll Live

According to Zandi, household net worth is now more than eight times after-tax income, compared with an average of 5.5 times after-tax income in the decades between World War II and the Great Financial Crisis of 2008.