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December 5, 2004 07:32 PM

Five Books to Retire By


Excerpt: Don't laugh: A good gift for the holidays could be a book about retirement planning and nest eggs.


Don't laugh: A good gift for the holidays could be a book about retirement planning and nest eggs.

If our mailbox is any indication, Americans have lots of questions about finances in later life. Each month, we hear from many hundreds of readers asking about Social Security, individual retirement accounts, annuities, estate planning and a dozen related topics. In particular, the shift away from traditional pensions and toward so-called defined-contribution plans, like 401(k)s, means that millions of people are on their own in deciding how best to build, and eventually tap, their nest eggs.

With that in mind, here are five books that address -- in a clear fashion and with lots of good examples -- some of the most important issues in retirement planning. John Grisham they aren't. But each book falls under the category of gifts that "keep on giving" -- in this case, helping to secure one's financial future.

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Moving Smoothly Into Retirement (December 07, 2004)
Retirement is on the horizon. You've planned diligently for the day you can quit working and start enjoying your post-employment lifestyle. But the actual mechanics of moving from collecting a paycheck to retiring on your savings and, for some lucky retirees, a pension, is more ...
Get Healthy, Get Wealthy (December 06, 2004)
As the time for New Year's resolutions approaches, many people will put healthier habits at the top of their list, only to abandon those lofty goals by Jan. 2. But most folks agree that money talks, and these days there are plenty of financial incentives ...
It has become widely accepted that many Americans will have to work part-time during "retirement" to maintain their living standards. But a new study has found that taxes, direct and indirect, will eat up much of what those people might earn. In short, it won't ...
Pension plans whose current assets match or exceed their future liabilities perform better on average than their underfunded brethren, according to a study released Wednesday by Fidelity Investments, the biggest U.S. mutual fund company. Of 120 defined benefit pension plans responding to the survey, 43 ...

Read all 23 posts in the same category of Retirement: