Retirement was a great idea back 50 years ago.... When people were physically "worn out" and the average life expectancy was 62 years (and Social Security was going to kick in at 65).
Everyone born after 1960 is currently required to work to 67. I suspect that will continue to rise.
And retirement was a great idea when people worked for The Company and got a defined benefit plan (called a Pension back in the day).
Almost nobody other than government workers still have those in my generation, and nobody was ever offered one. Old news. Real old.
Not even a majority of my parent's generation (Boomers) had them.
My grandparent's generation had many people who had them who were told the plan was insolvent and wouldn't be sending any more money in their 80s. Including my grandfather.
The family that both offered that pension and allowed it to go insolvent on my grandfather, flies on
@Everskyward 's employer's jets. They sold the company to a bigger one and didn't keep their parent's promises to their employees.
The Boomers who make it to 80 who still have pensions might have a similarly bad surprise. Lots of people in charge of those plans may do that.
Especially if Gen-X votes in 20 years not to bail out the programs that are already insolvent today.
20 more years of watching continuous insolvency might be motivation enough to say "no more".
Hard to say.
But again, realistically, pensions haven't been reality for anyone not working for government for more than two generations already.
I've never given a pension any serious thought toward my retirement, ever. If someone asks me to bail out someone else's, I have very little interest in prolonging insolvency.
(Oddly, for professional aviators, pensions held on a little longer than other private sector jobs too. Airlines had them longer than most companies. Those companies that survived all the M&A activity, anyway.)
We changed society in the last 50 years. We don't physically work as hard, in many cases, we got our life expectancy increased another 20 years.
This shows a bit of the crowd you run with. I know a number of folks who's bodies will be "worn out" by their 60s because of their jobs. Huge numbers.
Basically anyone in trades or non-aviation transportation. They work hard. Society didn't change much for them. Society may have changed for you, though.
My neighbor the roofer and handyman isn't working any less hard than the same business owner did 30 years ago. His body and ability won't last much beyond 65. Life expectancy may have risen, but ability to work hasn't in many jobs. A new kind of gap.
If you retire "early", in the 55-60 year range, you could be looking at 30 years of having to create entertainment for yourself.
Or just be drooling on yourself in a nursing care facility. It's very variable.
Is there a "moral" obligation for people to be productive for the last 30 years of life, or, are we allowed to be selfish and enjoy the good life?
If your kids are struggling to get by, and you are buying new airplanes, new golf clubs, etc.... is that ok?
If there are less fortunate people in shelters, and you are enjoying country clubs and new cars, is that ok?
I don't see myself retiring early, so I wonder if it is to avoid having to do any moral gymnastics to address the above.
Those questions are broader than retirement. Morals don't suddenly kick in at retirement age.
More importantly, continuing to work doesn't absolve anyone of answering those questions.
Immoral behavior is immoral, working or not. You can decide while working the answers to all of those questions for yourself just as well as after retirement. You can support the struggling kids, send money to the homeless shelter, or buy new golf clubs or fancy cars at any time. Doesn't matter if you're working or not.
They're not really retirement questions. They're lifelong questions.
Food prices have gone down a bit- good news for CFIs since I saw ramen noodles at 12/$2.20 (~5/$1) at WalMart, better than 3/$1 a few years ago.
Be cautious with food items as economic comparisons.
Most processed food makers lowered portion sizes during the last recession to make pricing stay equal or only go up smaller amounts. Can only compare like for like.
The reality is that inflation doesn't raise and lower all boats equally. Or deflation for that matter.
Fiat currency value moves and prices move, but they don't move at the same time in all markets. Friction.