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Retirement

Retirement Planning's Blind Spot: How To Structure Withdrawals Wisely

While most individuals focus on retirement corpus creation, financial planners say one should have a systematic withdrawal plan aided by annuities and inflation to ensure income security throughout life.

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Most individuals typically retire with a lump sum amount without a clear roadmap for liquidity. Photo: AI Image
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Summary

Summary of this article

  • With individuals increasingly expected to live into their mid-to-late 80s, a retirement corpus must now stretch across 25 to 30 years, not just 10.

  • Most individuals typically retire with a lump sum amount without a clear roadmap for liquidity. They withdraw this sum on an ad-hoc basis and simply hope the money lasts, exposing them to significant financial risk.

  • This is where annuities can become an essential part of your retirement plan.

Retirement planning for most working people means building up one big fat corpus in a number of savings and retirement vehicles. What they don't plan for is how to convert that corpus into a lifelong stream of income. The withdrawal phase is the real blind spot in retirement planning, and failing to plan for it can be costly indeed.

Why Structure of Withdrawals Matters

The retirement landscape in India is shifting rapidly. Indian families are transitioning from joint structures to independent and nuclear setups, with life expectancy on the rise. With individuals increasingly expected to live into their mid-to-late 80s, a retirement corpus must now stretch across 25 to 30 years, not just 10.

“Furthermore, inflation is India’s silent retirement killer. At a 6 per cent annual inflation rate, your cost-of-living doubles roughly every 12 years. A monthly expense of Rs 50,000 today will balloon to Rs 1 lakh by 2037. When you factor in emergency funds and soaring medical inflation, any withdrawal plan that fails to account for these rising costs will fall dangerously flat,” says Jayanti Jayaram, Vice President - Underwriting, Go Digit Life Insurance Ltd.

Yet, most individuals typically retire with a lump sum amount without a clear roadmap for liquidity. They withdraw this sum on an ad-hoc basis and simply hope the money lasts, exposing them to significant financial risk.

The Role Of Annuities In Retirement Income

“This is where annuities can become an essential part of your retirement plan. Yet, they remain significantly underutilised. An annuity is a financial product where you hand over a lump sum to an insurer in exchange for a guaranteed income stream tailored to your preferred frequency (monthly, quarterly, half-yearly, or annually) for life,” says Jayaram.

• Immediate Annuity: Here, you pay the lump sum amount and start receiving payouts immediately. Best for those who need money as soon as they retire.

• Deferred Annuity: Here, you build up funds when you are working and decide to start receiving payouts after a certain duration. It may be ideal for those in their 40s and early 50s who are looking for retirement plans.

Guaranteed Annuity: You are protected against market risks and receive highly predictable payments throughout the period of the annuity.

• Index-linked Annuity: You get partial exposure to market returns along with a guaranteed base level so that your payouts increase with good market performance, and you still have a sense of security.

• Life Annuity with Return of Purchase Price (ROP): “Life annuity with ROP offers you a regular income for your lifetime, and when you die, the original investment amount is paid back to your nominees. This addresses the concern of leaving behind something for your family,” Jayaram explains.

• Joint Life Annuity: This covers you and your spouse and ensures that when one of you dies, the other continues to receive an uninterrupted flow of income. This is important as Indian women tend to live longer than men.

Enhanced Health Protection: Opt for annuity options that offer riders for accelerated critical illness or ATPD (Accidental Total and Permanent Disability) benefit so that you are offered enhanced payouts or a lump sum payment during sudden illness.

Grasping these annuity concepts will allow you to plan ahead for a steady retirement income. Here’s how to implement a systematic method for handling your withdrawals.

Creating a Retirement Withdrawal Framework

Figure Out Your Real Retirement Requirements: Project your inflation-adjusted living expenses for your planned retirement years and use that number to arrive at your desired corpus (ideally for a 25- to 30-year time frame).

Factor In Death Benefits: Choose annuities that offer you a ‘Return of Purchase Price’ benefit on a defined milestone or upon death.

Create a Guaranteed Income Base: “Utilise annuities to lock in coverage for your essential baseline expenses. If you desire higher potential returns, you can opt for a variable percentage payout structure at policy inception,” says Jayaram.

Include Waiver of Premium Protection: Secure a Waiver of Premium rider so that future premiums are waived in the event of disability, critical illness, or severe income disruption, keeping your policy benefits active and uninterrupted.

Plan Smarter & Retire with Dignity

The ultimate challenge of retirement is managing longevity risk. The answer is not simply to save more, but to design a plan based on what you have. “The right annuity structure turns raw savings into absolute financial confidence. Start planning today, because a dignified retirement is not built on luck, but on careful and deliberate financial decisions,” suggests Jayaram.

FAQs

1. What is the need for a withdrawal plan?
As age progresses, medical costs and inflation are bound to rise. So, one needs to have a proper withdrawal plan to let the retirement corpus last long and cater to the financial needs throughout the lifetime.

2. What is an annuity, and how does it help retirees?
An annuity is a financial product that converts a lump sum into a regular stream of income, providing retirees with predictable cash flows and reducing the risk of outliving their savings.

3. How can retirees protect their income from rising costs?
Retirees should factor inflation into their withdrawal strategy, maintain an emergency fund, and consider annuity options that offer increasing payouts or market-linked growth potential.

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