Here’s the punch: retirement used to mean a gold watch, a pension check, and maybe a decade of fishing. That map is toast. The New York Times is pointing out what the actuaries have been muttering for a while: you’re now planning for 20 or 30 years on the other side of your last paycheck. Not a victory lap. A second act longer than most careers.
The old checklist — hit 65, claim Social Security, ride it out — was built for a 10-year runway. Stretch that to 30 and every assumption cracks. Withdrawal rates. Health costs. What you actually do on a Tuesday morning in year 14. Chances are the plan your parents used won’t get you halfway there. The opportunity? Everyone’s still using the old map, so the folks who redraw it early get a serious head start.
The old retirement map ends at the party. Cake, gold watch, credits roll. But the actual movie is 20 to 30 years long, and nobody handed you a script — which is why the “countdown checklist” industry is booming while the real question goes unanswered. Figure out what you’re retiring TO, not just what you’re retiring from. The math is the easy part.
Sources: The New York Times
