Top Retirement Countries

winnipegjets

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Want a Secure Retirement? Move to Slovenia

The United States ranks 19th worldwide when it comes to retirement security, according to a new analysis of worldwide economic and other data. That's probably comes as no surprise to many Americans who are fretting about whether they'll ever have enough money to stop working.

The Natixis Global Retirement Index puts U.S. retirees in a more precarious position than retirees in Western European countries including Norway, Switzerland and Germany, which have strong social programs providing health care and retiree benefits. But the analysis finds that the United States also lags countries including Israel, Japan, Slovenia and the Czech Republic.

On the other hand, we do rank better than the Brits, who came in at No. 20. And we're apparently in much better shape than Zimbabawe, which placed dead last at 150th in the rankings.

Natixis, an asset management firm with $779 billion in assets under management, created the index using worldwide data from the World Bank, United Nations and other sources. The index weighed factors including health expenditures, life expectancy, income inequality, unemployment and the ratio of young workers to older retirees.

The list comes as more Americans are fretting about their retirement own security. A Pew report released last fall found that nearly 4 in 10 Americans are not very confident they'll have enough money for retirement, a sharp increase over just a few years ago.

Fewer Americans are also now counting on retiring by age 65, a switch from a trend toward earlier retirement that lasted into the mid-1980s.

In the last several decades, many companies have moved from pension-type retirement plans to 401(k)-type plans that put more responsibility on individuals to save for their golden years.

Many Americans aren't saving enough, and some people who did have retirement savings were forced to pull money from those plans during the recent recession. The Natixis study cited a Senate report released last summer showing that, in total, Americans have saved $6.6 trillion less than they should have at this point for retirement.

The recent run-up in the stock market has probably helped some Americans feel better about the state of their 401(k)s, but a bull market won't be enough to make up the shortfall many Americans face.

The United States does have social safety nets in the form of Social Security and Medicare, which provide some monthly assistance and help to cover many health care expenses. But many other developed countries have much stronger safety nets that provide much more robust financial security.

"The message is clear: You will be call on to finance more of your retirement," John Hailer, Natixis's president and chief executive for the Americas and Asia, said in a statement.

Here are the top 20 nations in the Natixis retirement index.

1. Norway
2. Switzerland
3. Luxembourg
4. Sweden
5. Austria
6. Finland
7. Netherlands
8. Denmark
9. Germany
10. France
11. Australia
12. Israel
13. Canada
14. Belgium
15. Japan
16. Slovenia
17. Czech Republic
18. Slovakia
19. United States
20. United Kingdom
 
Looks like peppercrab has a good reason to return to Germany for retirement. Where's sinkapore?????
 
my dream retirement village..

four-seasons-borabora.jpg
 
What a crappy and unbalanced ranking. Retirement is not just about social security. Who would want to stay in those cold and gloomy countries? Probably only Australia is valid, people from those countries are moving away toplaces with warmer climate.
 
Thats from the perspective of non swimmer. To others this is a place to live like a fish

good at swimming but poor at balancing also sian, damn lehceh, everytime fall down, must swim and climb up....................
 
Victoria, BC, Canada is one great place to retire.

The retirement capital of Canada.

Panama, Costa Rica are great places to spend the winter months in. Northern Europeans like Thailand.

Someone should develop resorts in Vietnam to capture the winter crowd from the West.
 
the reason why the list is skewed in favor of western 1st world countries (with japan as an exception but having similar attributes) with nordic and temperate climates is that most of the retirees (with financial means) are from these countries and they still anchor their base in their home countries while going away for months to warmer countries during winter. their primary residential addresses are back home and their overseas abodes may be timeshare units, hotels, resorts, cruises, vacation or secondary homes. a lot of americans have vacation and/or retirement homes in belize and costa rica, but they are not registered as the primary residence.
 
Thats from the perspective of non swimmer. To others this is a place to live like a fish

When you are old, even a swimmer will have problems ;)

A good example is LKY, ever wondered why he is keeping a low profile:confused: Could it be that he needs help standing, walking, going to the toilet,.... It's not an image that the PAP wants the world to see.
 
the reason why the list is skewed in favor of western 1st world countries (with japan as an exception but having similar attributes) with nordic and temperate climates is that most of the retirees (with financial means) are from these countries and they still anchor their base in their home countries while going away for months to warmer countries during winter. their primary residential addresses are back home and their overseas abodes may be timeshare units, hotels, resorts, cruises, vacation or secondary homes. a lot of americans have vacation and/or retirement homes in belize and costa rica, but they are not registered as the primary residence.


In Canada, they are called Canadian snowbirds :)

These senior citizens fly off to warmer climates such as Fort Lauderdale when it's winter in Canada.
 
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