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The Psychology of Planning Your Financial Future

Everywhere you look, financial planners and economic advisers are telling us to save money for our retirement and our future. But the younger you are, the harder that is to really imagine - why should we put money away now that we can’t access for another thirty or forty years? What if I’m dead before then? What if something happens to that money and I lose it all anyway?

With these thoughts in mind, it’s useful to look into the psychology of saving for retirement. Obviously, our real “self” changes a lot from when we start working, perhaps as a teenager, and as we go through middle age, have a family, and then start looking forward to retirement - and even our attitude to money and savings will be forever changing.

Perhaps the best advice is to try to get outside of your own mind when you are looking into retirement planning and financial issues. Pat Regnier from Money Magazine put it really well:

Imagine that a court put you in charge of the finances of an elderly uncle you don’t know well. You’d set aside your own tastes and try to make prudent decisions for him. Do the same for you.

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This entry was posted on Sunday, March 22nd, 2009 at 4:27 am and is filed under Financial Planning. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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