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Life Cycle Approach to Retirement Planning

In the 1990s, financial planners developed a model based on a person's life cycle to help people understand retirement planning and other financial planning issues. The models may vary slightly, but they generally divide a person's life into the following five time periods or stages:

This model's greatest strength and its greatest weakness are the same: its simplicity. There is no model that could ever hope to neatly pigeonhole every major life event into tidy age groups. People may start or change careers or families late in life. Any number of similar life events may occur at any point in a person's life. At the same time, retirement planning issues can become quite complex and a life cycle model can help you make sound planning decisions without being overwhelmed.

Tip

Tip

Your retirement plans need to stay flexible enough to anticipate and adapt to change throughout your entire life. Investments that made sense at one time might not make as much sense as you age. Investment advisers generally suggest that young people invest in stocks and other types of investments where there is a chance for substantial appreciation. They also advise that, as people age, they switch to more conservative investments that guarantee income and are unlikely to lose value.


No matter where in the life cycle you are, you will always face unique challenges that require different retirement strategies. On the other hand, there always will be retirement planning issues that come up again and again. As you navigate through the life cycle stages, remember that most planning issues will involve answers to the following questions:

By answering these questions, individuals can determine at any given point in their life cycles whether their retirement goals can be achieved, and then they can act accordingly.


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