Concepts
High school students have rarely been asked to look at their future beyond where they will be going to college or what job they think they will have. This lesson asks you to think in a long-term perspective. By using a timeline, something you should be familiar with from past history classes, you can map out the major events in your lives: when you start working full time, buy your first house, get married, retire and finally die.
Introduction
High school students have rarely been asked to look at their future beyond where they will be going to college or what job they think they will have. This lesson asks you to think in a long-term perspective.
By using a timeline, something you should be familiar with from past history classes, you can map out the major events in your lives: when you start working full time, buy your first house, get married, retire and finally die.
There is a table which can be printed out before the lesson. (https://acrobat.adobe.com/us/en/acrobat.html required for the pdf files .)
See: "A Life and Work Life Expectancy Table" LifeExp.pdf
Learning Objectives
- Given an online life expectancy calculator and a work life expectancy table, students will determine how long they will be in retirement.
- Describe general patterns of income and major expenditures over one’s lifetime.
- Predict whether the value of a retirement portfolio will increase or decrease based on changes in savings rate and length of savings period.
Resource List
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Adobe Acrobat: This website allows for the program download needed to open the table "A Life and Work Life Expectancy Table" for this lesson. Click "Download Reader" for the free Adobe PDF Reader.
https://acrobat.adobe.com/us/en/acrobat.html
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"A Life and Work Life Expectancy Table": This table shows the life expectancy and work life expectancy for men and women between the ages 16 and 70.
www.preview2.econedlink.org/lessons/docs_lessons/128_LifeExp1.pdf
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The Living to 100 Life Expectancy Calculator: This website allows people to calculate their life expectancies and provides detailed personalized recommendations after answering a series of personal questions.
www.livingto100.com/calculator
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Retirement Planner: This calculator creates a personalized retirement plan after answering a series of questions.
https://www.dinkytown.net/java/retirement-planner-calculator.html
Process
Activity 1: Life Expectancy
Use the https://www.livingto100.com/calculator to determine the expected length of your own life.
All life expectancy tables are built on averages. In fact, of course, some individuals will live longer and others less than the average person.
- What is your life expectancy? Your parents? Your grandparents?
- What factors might increase or decrease life expectancy?
- How long can you expect to be retired if you retire at 55? 65? 70?
- Do you think life expectancy will increase or decrease in the future?
Along the horizontal axis of your timeline, enter your birthdate and estimated expiration date.
Activity 2: Work Life Expectancy
Why is the work life expectancy almost eleven years less than the social security retirement age? [The work life expectancy takes into account many things which are not included in the social security age. First, a person may leave the work force because of sickness or death. Women leave the work force to raise children.] The full social security retirement age is 67. This is 11 years more than the work life expectancy of 56 years. The work life expectancy shows the number of years one expects to be in the workforce earning wages and benefit. The work life expectancy is therefore a better tool for calculating how much your retirement benefits will be and how many years you have to save for retirement.
Add your work life expectancy to your timeline: the starting date for your work life and retirement date. Estimate your annual income over the same period of years and plot. You can also calculate your parents' work life and social security retirement dates and add them to your timeline.
Activity 3: Filling out the Time Line
Fit other important dates on your timeline. These might include: [These events can vary.]
- Graduation from high school and college
- Year married
- First car
- First child and when the child will go to college and get married
- First house and when you expect to stop making payments on your home (~30 years.)
- Major vacations
Activity 4: Estimating Your Retirement Needs
In the previous activities, you developed a picture of your lifetime income and expenditures. By now, you're probably aware how important it is to begin saving for your retirement. How much will you need to save? When should you begin saving?
Visit this https://www.dinkytown.net/java/retirement-planner-calculator.html and enter some of the data from the activities above. (Accept the web page's default values for rate of return, tax rates, etc.) Are you planning on saving enough to pay for your retirement? Try varying levels of annual contributions, retirement age, and your current age and record the resulting portfolio values.
- What happens to your IRA portfolio value when you increase your annual contribution to a retirement fund? [Increases.]
- What happens when you change your current age to indicate that you are older and are starting to save later? [Portfolio value decreases.]
- What happens when you increase your retirement age? [You are earning income for a longer period of time, are saving more, and therefore increasing the value of your retirement portfolio.]
Enter the value of your retirement portfolio on your timeline at the estimated time of retirement.
This exercise will help you put your life into perspective and see how your lifetime budget might be expected to play out. Think about the following questions: When will you be able to start to save for retirement? How will you pay for your children’s college education or the new car you want so badly? Hopefully, you will see that you have to make choices over their entire lifetime and not just today. How do you fit all of your life on the timeline and make it balance?