This post was part of a series about managing how you spend your investments, if you aim to live long, live within your means, and, perhaps, leave some for others. The main ideas have been updated and moved to an article on Retirement Income, on the Retired Now menu. If you wish, you can still read the original series, using the links below.
- Retail strategies, using all-in-one mutual funds. Simple solutions that work for some.
- Insurance strategies, using Social Security and maybe some annuities. This post.
- Endowment strategies, adapted from foundations and universities. Good for a reserve fund.
- Finance strategies, based on life-expectancy and future payments. Really good, simple methods.
- Smooth consumption, a comprehensive method that uses sophisticated software.
Social Security as Insurance
Do you see your Social Security benefits as a retirement account? Your view, perhaps, is that you made deposits into a personal account with payroll taxes, and, when the time comes, you will withdraw from that account. Actually, Social Security was devised not as a government-sponsored retirement account, but as a form of insurance for retirees, the disabled and their children, and widows and widowers. Payroll taxes are premiums that are paid into a pooled fund, and payments to retirees and other qualified individuals are benefits to insure them against lost income.
Viewed as insurance, Social Security benefits should be postponed to the latest possible age, because doing so maximizes the amount of the benefit. By waiting longer to collect your benefit, you get more insurance against loss of income later in life. You might need it if you live longer than expected or have large unplanned expenses. One excellent source of information is the website, Maximize My Social Security. For a modest fee, it provides a sophisticated online calculator to compute your best option for collecting benefits.
Viewed as insurance, Social Security benefits should be postponed to the latest possible age, because doing so maximizes the amount of the benefit. By waiting longer to collect your benefit, you get more insurance against loss of income later in life. You might need it if you live longer than expected or have large unplanned expenses. One excellent source of information is the website, Maximize My Social Security. For a modest fee, it provides a sophisticated online calculator to compute your best option for collecting benefits.
Social Security as Inflation Protection
As detailed in other posts in this series, it is difficult to use stock and bond investments to construct a retirement portfolio that will last a lifetime and reliably protect against inflation. Social Security benefits address this difficulty because they are both adjusted for inflation and paid until you depart. There's a flip-side, of course. You can't bequeath your Social Security benefits to an heir (although a spouse, former spouse, or child may be entitled to benefits of their own, because of their relationship to you). Your stock and bond investments, however, can be bequeathed to a charity or a person, if any assets remain in your estate. Because of their complimentary nature, you need both Social Security and some investments. The following list spells out the reasons, based on the payout risks likely to be of concern to a retiree:
Inflation: Will it erodes your income?
Inflation: Will it erodes your income?
- Social Security: Guaranteed protection.
- Investments: Some protection, depending on your investment strategy, but no guarantee. Read this post for details.
- Social Security: Guaranteed delivery of the same inflation-adjusted amount, every month.
- Investments: Likelihood of higher payouts some years, lower ones other years.
- Social Security: Guaranteed to last your lifetime.
- Investments: May last your lifetime if you adopt a good strategy, but failure is possible.
- Social Security: No help here. Your benefits won't increase if you suddenly need more.
- Investments: If you are wise with your strategy, you can set aside some retirement savings as a reserve or contingency fund.
- Social Security: No help here. You have guaranteed benefits to you, not to your heirs. There's no account balance that would go to your estate.
- Investments: Again, it depends on your strategy. It's possible, as other posts in this series explain, to follow a plan that has a high probability of leaving something for your estate, provided you avoid emergency payouts.
Annuities? Or Maybe Not.
If you have both Social Security benefits and retirement investments, do you also need an annuity? For many retirees, an annuity of any kind may add little value.
To see why, consider a typical retiree. Her actual Social Security benefits might cover 40% or more of her pre-retirement income (see, for example, a classic study by Munnell and Soto). This figure would rise if she maximized her Social Security benefits, because the actual practice, as noted in the reported studies, is that most retirees minimize their annual benefits by taking them too soon. As it happens, 46% is about how much of a typical household income is paid for housing and food expenses, according to the most recent survey by the U.S. Department of Labor. Your circumstances may differ. Still, to a good approximation, Social Security benefits may suffice to pay for your most critical expenses.
Thus, your income from investments, although it may vary from year to year, may only need to cover about 60% of your budget. If your investment income were to fall by, say, 30% in a given year, that's really 30% of 60%, or 18% of your total income. The key question is whether your budget can sustain a drop of 18% or so. If you have a reserve fund or can reduce some optional expenses or have ample investments, the answer may be yes. If not, you may want to consider annuitizing some (not all) of your investments, thereby raising your guaranteed income to a higher percentage than the 40% or so that Social Security might cover.
Should you chose to buy an annuity, it would be sensible to get one that resembles Social Security benefits. As explained in a related article, the best annuity is fixed (not a variable annuity); it pays for your lifetime (not for a limited period); and it's inflation-adjusted.
While your individual circumstances must guide your decision, you might, as a rule of thumb, consider your options very carefully before locking up more than two-thirds of your budget in the total of Social Security plus guaranteed annuities. Certainly, if your retirement investments are more than adequate to cover your income needs beyond what Social Security insures, then converting those investments to annuities would have little value. Other posts in this series provide some guidance on making such decisions.
To see why, consider a typical retiree. Her actual Social Security benefits might cover 40% or more of her pre-retirement income (see, for example, a classic study by Munnell and Soto). This figure would rise if she maximized her Social Security benefits, because the actual practice, as noted in the reported studies, is that most retirees minimize their annual benefits by taking them too soon. As it happens, 46% is about how much of a typical household income is paid for housing and food expenses, according to the most recent survey by the U.S. Department of Labor. Your circumstances may differ. Still, to a good approximation, Social Security benefits may suffice to pay for your most critical expenses.
Thus, your income from investments, although it may vary from year to year, may only need to cover about 60% of your budget. If your investment income were to fall by, say, 30% in a given year, that's really 30% of 60%, or 18% of your total income. The key question is whether your budget can sustain a drop of 18% or so. If you have a reserve fund or can reduce some optional expenses or have ample investments, the answer may be yes. If not, you may want to consider annuitizing some (not all) of your investments, thereby raising your guaranteed income to a higher percentage than the 40% or so that Social Security might cover.
Should you chose to buy an annuity, it would be sensible to get one that resembles Social Security benefits. As explained in a related article, the best annuity is fixed (not a variable annuity); it pays for your lifetime (not for a limited period); and it's inflation-adjusted.
While your individual circumstances must guide your decision, you might, as a rule of thumb, consider your options very carefully before locking up more than two-thirds of your budget in the total of Social Security plus guaranteed annuities. Certainly, if your retirement investments are more than adequate to cover your income needs beyond what Social Security insures, then converting those investments to annuities would have little value. Other posts in this series provide some guidance on making such decisions.
Disclaimer: Although a mixture of bonds, stocks, and guaranteed benefits may be safer than investing exclusively in one class of assets, diversification cannot guarantee a positive return. Losses are always possible with any investment strategy. Nothing here is intended as an endorsement, offer, or solicitation for any particular investment, security, or type of insurance.