The pandemic has given us all a new perspective on our lives and our work. I think that’s a big reason why we’ve had a number of our clients at Keen Wealth ask us about early retirement scenarios this year. After a year of locking down, missing friends and family, working from home, and in far too many cases, losing loved ones, folks want more than just financial security. They want to use their assets to live their best lives for as long as they can.
That’s what we want for our clients as well – in retirement and every step along the way. But the listener questions we answer on today’s show are a reminder that adjustments to your financial plan aren’t made in a vacuum. Each decision causes ripple effects that can be extremely hard to manage if you’re not working with a fiduciary advisor.
As good as it feels to be exiting the pandemic and enjoying a relatively normal summer, the ongoing economic fallout from COVID-19 and the levers our government pulled to accelerate recovery have a lot of folks worried about inflation. Those fears spiked recently after the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that consumer prices rose by 5% during the month of May, the biggest jump since 2008. Those numbers are ringing alarm bells for some of our older clients who don't like being reminded of 1970s stagflation as they're nearing or beginning retirement.
On today's show, we discuss whether inflation is inherently bad, what rising costs say about the health of our economy as a whole, and how our investment philosophy accounts for inflation over the course of a modern retirement.