Dingfelder
Well-known member
Honestly, 3k seems so incredibly paltry. What if you have not just one, but more than one problem in a year? I have problems pretty often and I hardly drive or do anything at all. I work on them for years on end but then another one just comes up and I'm always back to the tension and sometimes desperation of being back at Square One. There's medical, dental ... and who's to say you won't have not just one, but two car repairs that you can't do without in a single year? Pretty common, IMO. And then where are you going to live in the meantime awaiting repairs and how much will that cost? (A LOT!) These things can all pile up on each other pretty fast. I like that Bob is so optimistic, and that optimism can serve to steer people into a position better than being a tenant to a rapacious landlord, which is wonderful and can lead, I believe, to a long-term positive life-change. But I believe that if you are not devoted to not just having a minimal but an ever-increasing emergency fund, any life is virtually guaranteed to become harder over time.
Consider, if nothing else, inflation: the gov't. claims 8.5% last I looked/yr. But they manipulate the figures MIGHTILY. Sites like truflation look at previous metrics that the gov't. changed so that the numbers now would look better, and find true inflation anywhere from 12 to 20%/yr. That means that even if your SS is increasing, it may not be increasing anywhere near as much as you think. A trip to the grocery store confirms how much the basic costs of living are rising ... all the while your dollar is losing value. Your gov't.? Just dismisses those stats so they can claim a lower inflation figure and that there is no real recession going on.
So 3k a few years back when Bob recommended it is far from 3k today. And it will be worth far less next year. We count on these dollars to live, whether retired or not. Because the actual value of your savings/investments continually declines, you MUST expect to continuously increase your stored wealth not just to be doing better by far ... but merely to break even.
And if you cannot afford to live free anymore and must once more become a tenant? Rents are skyrocketing. Utilities are nuts. Be prepared, my friends. You can never have too big an emergency fund.
I'm trying mightily to increase mine. Incredibly hard. But I'm working on it.
Consider, if nothing else, inflation: the gov't. claims 8.5% last I looked/yr. But they manipulate the figures MIGHTILY. Sites like truflation look at previous metrics that the gov't. changed so that the numbers now would look better, and find true inflation anywhere from 12 to 20%/yr. That means that even if your SS is increasing, it may not be increasing anywhere near as much as you think. A trip to the grocery store confirms how much the basic costs of living are rising ... all the while your dollar is losing value. Your gov't.? Just dismisses those stats so they can claim a lower inflation figure and that there is no real recession going on.
So 3k a few years back when Bob recommended it is far from 3k today. And it will be worth far less next year. We count on these dollars to live, whether retired or not. Because the actual value of your savings/investments continually declines, you MUST expect to continuously increase your stored wealth not just to be doing better by far ... but merely to break even.
And if you cannot afford to live free anymore and must once more become a tenant? Rents are skyrocketing. Utilities are nuts. Be prepared, my friends. You can never have too big an emergency fund.
I'm trying mightily to increase mine. Incredibly hard. But I'm working on it.
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