Okay! I think I finally get why some guys are so uptight about annuities. They are young. They only understand how saving and growing works. Spending, decumulation or whatever you call it is another animal altogether. It’s not their fault - they obviously don’t have actual experience with retirement to draw on.
This forum and blog is chock-full with info about personal finance, mostly minimizing costs and maximizing profits/savings, in great detail. Retirement may be the objective but so many here obsess with efficiency and growth. The ultimate goal should always be happiness. How do you achieve that nebulous goal?
To start with, don’t get too carried away with rationality. It’s way overrated. Everyone believes they act rationally, but when it comes to spending money (or pandemics apparently) behavioral economics demonstrates time and time again that few actually act that way. I stress that the following is about decumulation, a under appreciated skill which some Forbes writer regards as being much more complicated than accumulation.
My father-in-law taught me a lot about retirement and aging by example. Bad example mostly. As a business owner, he retired with considerable assets but very low income limited to kokumin nenkin, tiny dividends, large but irregular insurance lump sums maturing to go along with his Nomura shares and funds. Despite knowing he’d never run out of money, he continually lamented the steady one-way movement of his bank account. It made him unhappy to draw down on cash and funds to live on. As a result, he lived well below his means which is typical for those in his situation of being a middle class retiree with limited income. They are used to saving, steady income and portfolio growth so the opposite is painful. He died in his mid-80s leaving a lot of money behind despite us encouraging him to use more to enjoy life.
Research shows this unfortunate tendency is not unusual. See <
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/retir ... 1628192718
Also
https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB112241804795796704 Finally, an excellent academic view on annuities as well as retirement happiness, the 4% rule fallacy, and other matters
https://www.morningstar.com/articles/94 ... rees-happy
Psychologically, it’s perfectly understandable to want to defend your nest egg from disappearing but what is the point of working for many years, becoming quite wealthy and yet feeling financially anxious in your few remaining years?
As a result of his example, my wife and I aimed to avoid financial anxiety by replacing as much of our working income as possible with regular income streams. So now in retirement, we are covering our living costs with monthly and bi-monthly income flowing into our accounts. We can spend it all knowing more comes in next month. I just love, adore and worship at the altar of regular income. We can both have advanced Alzheimer’s and still be sure of this income. And don’t forget this section is called Retire Japan for Dummies. Annuities, pensions, income-generating insurance plans are for dummies - absolutely no thinking required. No effort. No financial anxiety. No chance of ever going broke if you only spend what comes in. If you can do better with funds providing you with steady income then more power to you. (Not sure what happens if the market tanks just as you retire though.)
We are retired, we are happy, actually, far beyond happy. If that’s not good enough, then you have really missed the point. Did I mention that we are happy?