<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>				<article id="-1707950439"><artname>Determining Your Retirement Resources</artname><p>If you have taken the time to determine what your needs for <glossary def="The monetary return on one's labor or investments. Income may be wages, salaries, bonuses, dividends, or interest." primary="Income">income</glossary> in <glossary def="Termination of employment due to age, choice, or physical limitation. Certain benefits, such as Social Security payments, are available to those who retire. In finance, retirement is the paying of a debt when or before it is due." primary="Retirement">retirement</glossary> <nodef>will</nodef> be, the next step in <glossary def="A structured strategy for saving or investing money to be used during one's retirement years." primary="Retirement Plan">retirement planning</glossary> <nodef>will</nodef> be to add up the resources you expect to have from your current saving and <glossary def="The purchase of a potentially appreciable asset such as a stock, a bond, a property, or a unit of production. The purchase provides funds for the growth of businesses and governments." primary="Investment">investment</glossary>.</p><ulist><item>Start by determining the income that <nodef>will</nodef> be provided by your current sources of <glossary def="Income available to a person for retirement expenses. If it comes from a retirement plan or annuity, it will take effect at a stipulated age. The amount and how often it is paid can be set down by agreements." primary="Retirement Income">retirement income</glossary>: your <glossary def="A government-approved employee retirement plan." primary="Pension">pension</glossary> plan and any employer-sponsored savings and investment plans you may participate in at work; any <glossary def="A retirement plan created by the US government to encourage people to save for their own retirement. Benefits include tax-deferred growth and, depending on the type of IRA, tax deductibility or tax-free withdrawal. There are several qualifications and limitations as to who may contribute and when withdrawals may be made." primary="Individual Retirement Account (IRA)">individual retirement accounts</glossary> (IRAs) you have established; other investments and <glossary def="A level stream of equal dollar payments that lasts for a fixed time. An example would be a person's yearly allowance paid out from a lump sum of money he or she invests with an insurance company. This yearly payment continues for a set number of years or until the person's death. The payout may begin at once or may start at a future date." primary="Annuity">annuities</glossary>; your <glossary def="A business agreement in which a bank, credit union, or other financial institution agrees to hold and pay interest on money deposited. The customer may withdraw some or all of the money, but not by writing a share draft or check." primary="Savings Account">savings accounts</glossary>; and, of course, the value of your home and other property.</item><item>What about <glossary def="A program of the federal government that provides workers and their dependents with retirement, disability, and other payments. The money for Social Security payments comes from a tax, usually labeled FICA on one's paycheck, that employees and employers pay equally." primary="Social Security">Social Security</glossary>? You might plan based on current <glossary def="The amount to be paid to an insurance policyholder or a beneficiary at retirement, death, or at the end of a period of insurance or other coverage. In retirement planning, benefits are the amount to be paid upon retirement." primary="Benefit">benefit</glossary> levels, but remember that the longer you postpone taking Social Security benefits, the more benefits you can receive until your full <glossary def="The age at which one may or must stop working. The age is set forth in contracts or laws." primary="Retirement Age">retirement age</glossary>. If you are in your 20s, 30s, or 40s, it may be best not to include Social Security benefits in your planning at all.</item><item>Next, you <nodef>will</nodef> need to convert all your sources of retirement income into an annual income stream and make an estimated adjustment for <glossary def="A rise in the general price level of goods and services; inflation is the opposite of deflation. The Consumer Price Index and the Producer Price Index are the most common measures of inflation. As a probable result of inflation, labor asks for higher wages to buy more, prices rise to meet those wages, and inflation becomes a cycle." primary="Inflation">inflation</glossary>. When you subtract your estimated annual income from your estimated needs, you <nodef>will</nodef> know where you stand.</item></ulist><p>If you are like many people, there is probably a gap between where you would like to be at retirement and where your current rate of saving and investing <nodef>will</nodef> bring you. The next step in retirement planning, then, is to determine what you <nodef>will</nodef> do about the shortfall.</p></article>	