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Financial Literacy 2008 - Securing retirement
Part 15 of 18
TAKE ACTION
The unsolved mystery
The big unknown is how much you'll need for rising health care costs. Estimates from the financial industry run high.
Securing retirement

Managing health care in retirement

Trying to rein in rising health care costs is like trying to stop a rocket launch with kite string. And finding the money to pay for medical expenses and long-term care may seem equally futile. But it's a big issue that can affect the quality of your retirement.

The average American spent $2,664 on health care in 2005 (including prescription drugs and vitamins), a 3.5 percent increase over the previous year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Not surprisingly, the tab for people 65 and older was much higher -- $4,193 on average.

So saving a pot of money in addition to your retirement nest egg could mean the difference between spending your retirement on the golf course and wrangling shopping carts in a parking lot for medical benefits. The key is to map out a plan and start now.

Health care options
Assess your costs
Like mushrooms after a heavy rain, medical problems may pop up quickly, yet few people save money to deal with them. Some just can't afford it; others mistakenly think they'll be in great health for the rest of their lives.

Further, most Americans are unaware of the staggering amount of money they'll need to cover medical expenses through their retirement.

"We did a study that shows a couple aged 65 today would need $225,000 in post-tax savings to pay for health care expenses throughout their retirement," says Sunit Patel, a senior vice president and health care expert at Fidelity Investments in Boston.

Other studies suggest much more would be needed. A "low-risk" couple at age 65 should have about $635,000 saved for medical expenses, according to a May analysis by the Employee Benefit Research Institute.

If you're 45 today, the amount you'll need will be even higher when you turn 65 due to inflation. Costs for retiree medical benefits have been going up at about a 6 percent annual rate since 2004, according to Patel.

"It gives you an idea of the magnitude of dollars that we're talking about here," he says.


-- Posted: July 28, 2008
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