- As
featured in The Los Angeles Times
Even a Bad Investor Can Beat Social Security
Savings:
Private investments
would yield better returns.
By Christine
Murphy
-
- I had a discussion
with a friend about the recent proposals to allow individuals to divert
part of their Social Security taxes into private investments. "The
problem is that most people, Including me, don't know much about financial
planning," said my friend, echoing one of the oft-heard arguments
against privatization. "Social Security isn't great, but at least
I'm better off with it than I'd be if I made stupid investments and
lost my money." My friend's comment prompted me to do some back-of-the-envelope
calculations to see just how bad an Investor you can be and still
beat Social Security.
-
- Let's suppose
that, like my friend, you're 32 and you've paid $46,788 into the Social
Security fund. According to the Social Security Personal Earnings
and Benefit Estimate Statement, you can expect to receive $610 per
month when you are eligible for full benefits at age 67. To make the
calculations simpler, let's pretend Uncle Sam has excused you from
paying another penny into Social Security for the rest of your life
and has returned to you the $46,788.
-
- Now you want
to invest it. You're not hip to the latest hot stock tips, so you
opt for a more conservative approach and a more conservative return.
Easy enough: you put the $46,788 in a basic tax-deferred retirement
account that invests in 30-year government bonds at a yield of 7%
compounded-a yield at which they've been hovering recently, but one
that is well below their 7.87% average yield for the last 10 years.
When you turn 67 in 35 years, your $46,788 will have grown to almost
$499,536. If you then invested the $499,536 at 6%, say, by maintaining
it in an annuitized retirement account, you could leave the principal
untouched and you could withdraw $2,498 per month in interest alone.
That is more than four times the amount you'd receive from Social
Security.
-
- It isn't just
a lack of investment savvy that makes privatization a bad idea, some
people - argue, it's that many people are gullible. They'd make downright
stupid investments and lose money. Still, the question remains: How
bad an investor can you be and still beat Social Security? Very bad.
-
- Suppose you gave
two-thirds of your original lump sum to a nice man who promised to
make lots of money for you in copper futures. He called yesterday
to tell you he's sorry, but he lost every penny of the $31,192 you
gave him.
-
- Now you're left
with $15,596. Can you invest this amount in a relatively unsophisticated
way and still beat Social Security? Yes. Just put the. $15,596 into
the same tax-deferred retirement account mentioned earlier. At 7%,
your $15,596 would grow to almost $166,512 by the time you reach 67.
If you then invested the $166,512 at 6% in an annuitized retirement
account, You could withdraw $833 per month in interest alone without
touching the principal. This is still $223 a month more than what
Social Security says you can expect to receive.
-
- I showed these
calculations to my friend. Wow," he said. "I'd be better off investing
my retirement savings myself, even if I'm not the smartest investor
around." Let's hope the folks in Washington come to the same conclusion
before it's too late.
-
- Christine Murphy
is a writer in Los Angeles. She can be reached at:
- cmsilk@aol.com
Copyright © Larry Elder & Associates
- All rights reserved.
Send mail to Larry@larryelder.com
www.larryelder.com
|