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Retirement

Retirement Isn’t A 50s Problem - It’s A Time Problem

Retirement isn’t a problem you solve in your fifties. The best time to start was your first job. The second-best time is today.

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Delaying retirement investing doesn’t just postpone contributions - it permanently erases compounding years that can never be recovered. Photo: AI Image
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Summary

Summary of this article

  • Compounding doesn’t reward intensity; it rewards patience.

  • Money invested early gets something no later investment can buy time to multiply on itself.

  • Building retirement security doesn’t require dramatic sacrifices in your twenties. It requires consistency.

Rajesh and Amit started their careers together at 25. Same company. Same salary - Rs 6 lakh a year. Same ambition. The only difference? Rajesh listened when his father casually said, “Start investing early. Even if it feels small.” He began a Rs 5,000 monthly SIP in equity mutual funds. Amit didn’t disagree, he just postponed. “I’ll start when I’m more settled,” he said. “Maybe when I’m 35 and earning more.”

Thirty years later, at 55, math told a very different story.

Rajesh invested Rs 5,000 a month for 30 years, a total of Rs 18 lakh. At a 12 per cent average return, his retirement corpus stood at Rs 1.75 crore.

Amit started at 35 with double the commitment - Rs 10,000 a month - for 20 years. He invested more money overall – Rs 24 lakh. Yet, his corpus reached closer to Rs 99 lakh.

Rajesh invested less and retired richer. The difference wasn’t discipline. It wasn’t intelligence. It was time.

Why The First Decade Does The Heavy Lifting

Most people misunderstand compounding. They think it’s a bonus, something nice that happens after you invest seriously. In reality, compounding is the engine. And time is the fuel. Money doesn’t grow in straight lines. It grows exponentially. Returns earn returns. And the earlier those first rupees are invested, the longer they get to multiply.

Sanjiv Bajaj, Joint Chairman and MD at BajajCapital Ltd, explains: “Compounding doesn’t reward intensity; it rewards patience. Investors often believe they can compensate for lost time by investing larger amounts later, but the mathematics rarely support that. Money invested early gets something no later investment can buy; time to multiply on itself.”

That’s why a 25-year-old investing Rs 5,000 a month often builds more wealth than a 35-year-old investing Rs 10,000. The early rupee simply works harder.

The Cost Of ‘I’ll Start When I’m Settled’

Every young professional has heard or said some version of this:

  • “Retirement is too far away to worry about now.”

  • “Once my salary grows, I’ll start seriously.”

  • “Right now, life expenses are too high.”

Each sounds reasonable. Each is quietly expensive. Delaying retirement investing doesn’t just postpone contributions; it permanently erases compounding years that can never be recovered. Starting ten years late often means working five years longer just to reach the same comfort.

Bajaj says, “Time creates flexibility. When you start early, you have room to adjust, pause, or course-correct. When you start late, every decision has to work harder - higher savings, greater exposure to market cycles, and much less margin for error.”

Small Early Actions That Change Everything

Building retirement security doesn’t require dramatic sacrifices in your twenties. It requires consistency. A Rs 2,000–3,000 SIP started at 25 can quietly grow into Rs 40–55 lakh over time. Not because the amount is large but because the duration is. The most powerful habit isn’t starting big. It’s starting early and stepping up gradually. Increasing investments by 10–15 per cent each year, as income grows, creates a disproportionate impact without feeling painful.

Automating these investments is key. When money moves out the day salary arrives, it never competes with lifestyle spending. What you don’t see, you don’t miss.

If You’re Starting Late

Starting late doesn’t make retirement impossible, but it changes the journey. A 40-year-old aiming for a Rs 4–5 crore corpus by 60 often needs to invest Rs 40,000–50,000 a month, stay disciplined through market cycles, and accept tighter trade-offs. It’s achievable - but demanding.

Bajaj notes: “Late starters can still build strong outcomes, but the journey becomes more deliberate and less forgiving. Early starters buy optionality. Late starters rely on precision.”

Retirement isn’t a problem you solve in your fifties. The best time to start was your first job. The second-best time is today because every year you delay isn’t neutral. It’s compounding you’ll never get back.

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