7 Reasons to Work Part-Time in Retirement

Working part-time during your retirement years is a quick way to improve your finances. A part-time job could also be good for your social life and even your health, especially if you find a second career you enjoy. Here are seven reasons to consider working a part-time job in retirement:
 
You didn't save enough. Your finances might dictate that you work part-time during retirement. Many portfolios took a hit just before retirement, thanks to the financial crisis of 2008. But even if your portfolio is doing fine, you might simply not have a big enough nest egg to completely stop working during the early stages of your retirement. Consider your financial situation, and determine whether working part-time will help you stretch your retirement income a little further, providing you with a little more breathing room in your budget.
 
Delay claiming Social Security. Another reason to work part-time during retirement is to put off the need to take Social Security early on. The longer you wait to begin drawing on Social Security, the higher your monthly benefit will be.
 
Delay tapping your retirement savings. Working part-time can help those who retire early to avoid retirement account penalties. You can't withdraw money from your tax-advantaged retirement accounts prior to age 59 1/2 without incurring a 10 percent early withdrawal penalty. So, if you want to retire early, you can work a part-time job that you enjoy until you can start taking penalty-free distributions from your retirement accounts.
 
Better health. While the financial reasons for working part-time during retirement are certainly important, they aren't the only considerations. A 2009 study in the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology found that those who worked during retirement experienced better health than those who didn't. People with retirement jobs also suffer less from major diseases and disabilities. This is great for your quality of life, and it could lead to lower health care costs and a reduced chance that you will need long-term care.
 
Improve your social life. There are mental and emotional health benefits to working during retirement. The social interaction improves your mood, and can stave off depression.
 
Mental stimulation. There are indications that keeping your mind active with the help of a part-time job can hold memory-related problems at bay. If you choose a part-time job that you enjoy, such as a position that incorporates your interests or a hobby, the benefits are increased. You'll do something you love, get paid for it, and enjoy a boost to your social life.
 
Creative scheduling. You don't have to get a boring part-time job. Consider consulting, becoming a seasonal tour guide, or teaching classes at your local community education organization. Even if you don't need to work part-time for money in retirement, you could volunteer in your community for many of the same benefits.
 
Remaining active during retirement is a great way to ward off major ailments, as well as keep your mind sharp and prevent depression and anxiety from setting in. You can make new friends, earn some money, and generally improve your retirement situation.
READ MORE - 7 Reasons to Work Part-Time in Retirement

2 Easy Ways to Make Fast Money Online

When talking about easy ways to make money online, there are hundreds of ways to make easy money online. There are ways that could make you a couple of extra bucks to help you pay off some bills, and there are ways that could replace your monthly income and let you retire and go home.
 
It's also good to know that there are ways that could actually make you rich, and not just replace your income it could turn you in to a millionaire and allow you to change your lifestyle, live the way you have always dreamed of, and buy the house you always wanted, fly on vacations more often, and much more.
 
So, before you start looking for ways to make you money, you have to know what your goal is. Because not knowing where you're heading to is the best reason for not getting there.
 
So, you have to set a goal, knowing what you want to get out of your online business. Should it be a few hundred dollars a month or three thousand dollars a month, it really doesn't matter how much, but you just have to know that before you start.
 
Once you know what your goal is, and how much you want to earn, it is much easier to get there. Because depending on your personal goal you know what method to choose to make you earn money.
 
Below is a list of 2 very successful ways to make easy money online.
 
1. Make money with Blogging
 
Blogging is a very common way to make money among those that earn money online. It is also very long term, meaning that it could take some time to start earning with your blog, but in most cases it is well worth your time. Check out Internet #1 - Make Fast Easy Money Online @ http://www.churifita.info and change your life forever!
 
The way you earn money blogging is through placing affiliate offers or AdSense ads on your blog, and every time somebody clicks on a AdSense ad or buys an affiliate product you earn money.
 
The things you have to do is, create a blog and post very often, so that you get a lot of visitors to your blog. And from these visitors you could earn a nice income. A lot of people make thousands of dollars from their blogs.
 
2. Mini Websites
 
Setting up mini websites is also an excellent easy way to make money. It takes pretty fast to set up such a website, once you learn how to set it up once it could take you just a couple of hours to set up another one.
 
The earning potentials of such a website is between $150 - $600 per website. But you could also earn much more.
 
So, if you set up just ten of such websites it shouldn't take you more than two weeks if you get the right training, that could earn you between $3000 - $5000 a month. Doesn't it sound great? Just imagine if you would have twenty or perhaps even thirty of those websites, Wouldn't it be great?
READ MORE - 2 Easy Ways to Make Fast Money Online

Save Money on Homeowners Insurance

he market value of my home has declined over the past few years. Can I save money by reducing my homeowners coverage?
 
No. You should never lower the amount your house is insured for just because housing prices have dropped. That's because cutting the amount of your insurance could leave you with insufficient coverage in the event of a disaster.
Related Links
 
    * Upgrade Your Home Insurance
    * TOOL: Is Your Home Fully Protected?
    * QUIZ: Are You Covered?
    * 4 Reasons to Reshop Your Auto Insurance
    * 10 Reasons Your Insurance May Need a Checkup
 
The market value of your home and its insurance value can vary widely because they are based on different assumptions and calculations. The insurance value is based on what it would cost to rebuild the house -- not on what you paid for it. And although housing prices have dropped, rebuilding costs have not. (On the other hand, the sales price takes into account the value of the land, which isn't factored into the insurance value; the land could still be valuable, even if your home were to burn down .)
 
To calculate how much it might cost to rebuild based on your home's size, building materials and any special features, try the calculator at AccuCoverage.com. For $7.95, you'll get an immediate estimate of your home's insurance value from Marshall & Swift/Boeckh, which provides building-cost estimates to the insurance industry. It's also a good idea to rerun the numbers after you make any major home improvements, and notify your insurer if you need to increase your coverage. You can usually boost your insurance limit by tens of thousands of dollars without making your premiums go through the roof (see Upgrade Your Home Insurance for more information about calculating your insurance needs).
 
To save money on your homeowners insurance, however, you could increase your deductible. Increasing your deductible from $500 to $1,000 could lower your premium by as much as 25%. And increasing your deductible will discourage you from filing small claims that could jeopardize your insurer's claims-free discount or get you dropped by your insurer altogether (boost your emergency fund to make sure you have enough money to cover the deductible). See Slash Your Insurance Costs for strategies to help you save money on all kinds of insurance.
READ MORE - Save Money on Homeowners Insurance

More Americans forsaking life insurance coverage

It's enough to make an insurance agent tremble: Millions of cash-strapped Americans are saving money by going without life insurance.
 
Ownership of life insurance has reached a 50-year low, according to industry research firm LIMRA. Thirty percent of households (35 million) are not covered, up from 22 percent in 2004. Among households with minor-aged children, 11 million lack coverage.
 
Insurance salespeople have sounded the alarm, warning that penny-wise and pound-foolish habits could leave loved ones devastated if a death occurs. Financial advisers agree that many Americans probably should have at least a little life insurance. But experts urge people who are pressed for cash to keep in mind the ultimate goal: limiting risk for survivors. Life insurance isn't the only way to accomplish that goal.
 
"Say you didn't have any kids, your spouse has a law degree, and you don't owe a lot of money in your business. You may not need to get life insurance," says Bill Gustafson, senior director of the Center for Financial Responsibility at Texas Tech University in Lubbock. "Because she's got human capital, she'd be able to enter the labor force if something happens to the other person."
 
So what are other ways to limit risk for survivors? Start with estate planning, financial advisers say. People with dependents should use such instruments as wills and trusts to direct assets in a tax-efficient manner to survivors, according to Stuart Armstrong, a certified financial planner in Needham Heights, Mass. Those who take such steps might still need some life insurance, he says, but they may not need as much -- or may not need any if assets are substantial enough.
 
Even those with few or no assets can benefit from estate-planning principles, planners say. For example: Inexpensive wills can provide for guardianship of a child or a dependent elder.
 
If a head of household makes arrangements with trusted family members to provide for dependents, then that person has substantially cut his or her survivors' risks, according to Tom Fisher, a certified financial planner in Cambridge, Mass. This approach might function as a type of de facto insurance policy, he says, in families that cannot afford life insurance or who choose not to carry it.
 
Get a verbal agreement, at least
 
"I would certainly encourage them to make sure they've had that conversation about providing for dependents, rather than just assuming it," Fisher says. "It's not so much a matter of getting it in writing if you trust your family, but you do want to make provisions for guardianship."
 
Lifestyle planning can go a long way, too. Consider a couple who has two children, lives in a four-bedroom house, and depends on one primary income. If the at-home spouse has marketable skills, then she or he might draft a realistic plan for carrying on after being widowed.
 
Example: Rejoin the work force, downsize to a smaller home, and otherwise cut expenses. A well-conceived plan means a household doesn't need a life insurance policy that would sustain a current lifestyle because the lifestyle is certain to give way to a more sustainable one.
 
Cut down on debt
 
Other techniques can reduce risk as well. Gustafson recommends keeping debt levels low, because a surviving spouse can inherit debt as well as assets. People who are not eligible for life insurance, such as someone with chronic health conditions, might want to look into the death benefits available through variable annuities, Fisher says. He cautions, though, that annuities typically come with high fees and modest death benefits.
 
Families might use multiple strategies for cutting risk for survivors, Armstrong says. But few financial instruments offer a tax-free lump sum payment at a time when it's most needed. For that reason, he says, life insurance is often worth carrying, at least when children are young and risks are substantial.
 
"A lot of guys don't realize that a wife, especially, needs that security of knowing she'll be able to go on if something were to happen to her husband," says Jan Henryson, director of the nonprofit Center for Financial Education in Sioux Falls, Iowa.
 
A growing number of Henryson's clients are trying to save money by forgoing life insurance. Because most of them lack an alternative strategy, she urges those with young children to investigate getting life coverage through employee benefits plans.
 
Some with kids do well to lock in premiums on 15-year coverage plans, she added.
 
"We encourage them very strongly, if they are insurable, to look for a term life policy that is pretty inexpensive for the coverage you can get and the security you can provide for your family," she said.
 
A healthy nonsmoker younger than 40 can get a $250,000 policy for less than $25 per month, according to Mike Halloran, a Jacksonville insurance salesman and president of the National Association of Estate Planners & Councils.
 
"The biggest thing life insurance has going for it is the tax-free death benefit that you get in most cases," Armstrong says. "There aren't many assets that can rival that, especially when you're paying pennies on the dollar to get that death benefit."
 
Read more: More Americans forsaking life insurance coverage - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/business/s_723842.html#ixzz1EbsUMUdd
READ MORE - More Americans forsaking life insurance coverage

How We're Transforming Insurance Sub-Sector, By Fola Daniel

Mr Fola Daniel, Commissioner for Insurance, takes Vanguard's Editor, Northern Operations, Jide Ajani, and Favour Nnabugwu, through the present state of the nation's insurance industry, the sector's preparedness for IFRS March 2011 deadline, the potentials insurance companies are tapping into, NNPC insurance accounts and the subjection of companies to bidding fees by government agencies.
 
Excerpts:
 
With the transition from N350 million to N5 billion in setting up an insurance company, there were challenges and even doubts in some quarters as to what was really going on, especially with the verification that was carried out.
 
That is speculation. Before the bubble burst in the banks, people were still in doubt of the N25bn capital base, but when the bubble burst, it became apparent that they did meet it and even exceeded the threshold of N25bn.
 
They had other problems that came as a result of the inability to manage the big fund at their disposal but the question of any bank not having the N25bn was no longer an issue. Some insurance companies have the required minimum capital base whilst a few others have exceeded it.
 
Most insurance companies purporting to have raised N3bn for general business or N5bn for composite did not really have it and that led the government to set up a verification committee to verify if indeed, the companies have the amount they claimed to have, N2bn for life, N3bn for general, N5bn for composite and N10bn for reinsurers and the findings of that committee is that virtually all of them had what they claimed they had.
 
Don't ask me how they made it. Most of them attained it but few companies didn't make it and some of the few companies are big companies and they are shying away from the fact that they didn't have it. The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) and the government were nearly scandalised. They were made a laughing stock that they were too big not to have what they claimed they had, but we went through a judicial process where it became apparent that the commission was right and the other party was wrong.
 
Do you foresee the scandal of insurance companies having problems like the banks?
 
Even before the Soludo crisis became public knowledge, we had the feeling that things were not okay with the banks, but we decided to mind our own business. One of the things we did in the commission without being forced to do so was a forensic investigation on insurance companies' accounts. You must have read in the newspapers that NAICOM was delaying passage of accounts that it was taking eternity for the commission to approve an account and all that.
 
What we did was to meticulously x-ray the books of every insurance company to ensure that what they claimed to have is indeed, what they have. And, l can proudly say that any published accounts of an insurance company represent nothing but the truth. We have gone the extra mile to assess that the accounts of insurance companies represent the true figure they claim. In the published accounts of insurance companies between last August and December, you find out that some big companies had holes in their books.
 
About three of them had as much as N5bn and I know that some of those companies are going out now to raise funds. It is not indicative of what can happen tomorrow.
 
Four insurance companies were not given approval last year, hence they could not conduct their 2009 annual general meeting. What is their fate now?
 
The fact that they failed to hold an AGM is not conclusive that they are troubled. One company, for instance, submitted their 2009 accounts on December 30, by 4p.m. in this office whilst two others submitted on the 31st; so it was not possible for us to clear the accounts on the 27th even for those who submitted on the 30th and 31st of December.
 
One would have thought that even with the benefit of all the time they had, they would have tidied up their books to the satisfaction of the regulator but we still had to raise queries on the accounts. We had issues with the accounts and, until they are satisfactorily resolved, we cannot approve them and, if we don't approve, they cannot go to do an AGM.
 
I am not saying that the four companies are necessarily troubled, but, as regulators, we are worried if a company which is meant to submit its report in June and the company submitted late, we should be worried. One of the companies belongs to a group of companies and they have tentacles outside Nigeria. One of the reasons they gave was that they needed to consolidate their balance sheets.
 
Of course, if you want to consolidate a balance sheet, particularly the one that is domiciled in French, there is a challenge. That is not to say that I'm defending but just giving you information. We had a problem still trying to clear the accounts.
 
The International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), March 2011 deadline is near. How prepared are the insurance companies?
 
Everybody within the financial service sector in this country has challenges meeting that standard. What we will try to do in the insurance sector is to bring the industry to the pedestal of transparency and openness but the IFRS demands more than that, it is an upgrade. It is taken that your disclosure will encompass transparency and accountability, but what we try to do in the last two years is to bring the insurance industry to that realm. We recognise that the insurance industry has some challenges complying with IFRS.
 
That is why we decided to start ahead of others. We had an outing on January to highlight what the issues and challenges are and to also proffer possible remedies in order to leverage on experience from elsewhere.
 
Why is the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), holding back insurance premium?
 
I read in the newspapers that INEC is insuring all the property they are going to use for the elections. To me, it was cheering news, but whether the insurance companies have been paid or not, I cannot say. I think l have a high degree of confidence in the leadership of INEC and, if the management of INEC decided to insure, I believe they are going to pay.
 
You must also remember that INEC has some financial challenges. You can see that they have gone to the National Assembly in the last few months to request for supplementary budget. If INEC has taken those policies indeed, l am sure they are going to pay insurance companies.
 
Insurance companies and brokers were forced to pay bidding fees by INEC. What is NAICOM doing about it?
 
We are in a democratic era and government agencies and departments advertise for bidding process and all insurance companies could have said 'no, we are not going to pay any bidding fee; and the commission would have supported them because when parastatals and agencies want to put money in the various banks, they do not advertise or ask them to pay bidding fees. In 2008, one of the government parastatals asked insurance companies to bid.
 
The bidding fees ranged between N100,000 and N800,000 depending on the class of business a company wished to engage in. About two or three insurance companies drew my attention to it and l left my office and drove straight to the parastatal and told them,'you can't do this,' and I gave them some analogies: 'Do you give your money to banks? Do you engage lawyers? Do you patronise hospitals?' They said yes. Then, I asked why they were subjecting insurance companies to bidding fees.
 
The DG of that parastatals was on the defensive as she was a bit apologetic until the legal adviser came to her rescue and said, 'Madam, are we discussing the future bids or the present bids?' I didn't know where the legal adviser was heading to.
 
The legal adviser said before I got to their office about 48 insurance companies out of 51 had complied and had paid the bidding fees. And, he said, 'perhaps the insurance commissioner is here to talk about future bidding fees so that we can be so guided in the future but if he came for this particular exercise, 48 insurance companies had already paid.'
 
I was in the company of the then chairman of the Nigerian Insurers Association (NIA), Mr Wole Oshin. We were embarrassed. If my constituent could rush to pay for bidding process within two weeks for an exercise that had six weeks grace, if they did not have any problem paying the fees, why were they complaining? I seriously believe that insurance companies should not be made to go through paying for bidding process.
 
What is you advice to the layman on the street about insurance?
Relevant Links
Insurance with a small payment called premium is worth the trouble if anything should happen to even your children's bicycles that are not less than N100,000. For five per cent of N100,000, you can get the bicycles secured against theft, accident; so insurance remains the cheapest way of managing risks. Insurance is not only for the elite but also for the average man.
 
A man that has 10 cars will not lose a sleep if anything should happen to one of the cars but for a man who managed to save and bought a Tokunbo car, he may never be able to buy another car; so, why not set aside a small amount of money to secure the car.
 
What is the delay in NNPC 2011 insurance about?
 
I know that NNPC incepted a process that will lead to their insurances being renewed and l know that part of the thing NNPC does on yearly basis is to ask the old insurers to hold covers until the renewal is concluded and usually there will be no gap. NNPC is too organised to allow for gap. They cannot do that.
READ MORE - How We're Transforming Insurance Sub-Sector, By Fola Daniel

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