
Wall Street “Discovers” Longevity—and Gets Retirement Wrong Again
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Big investment firms are suddenly realizing that people are living longer, healthier lives—and treating it like a breakthrough. A new Morgan Stanley paper frames increased longevity as a transformational economic force, arguing that 21st-century finance will shift from accumulation to decades-long retirement drawdowns. But this isn’t new information, and the proposed solutions miss the point. Designing income models around 40-year retirement periods ignores how real people live, work, adapt, and evolve over time. Life doesn’t unfold in neat phases, and treating retirement as a prolonged financial drought forces unrealistic saving, delayed living, and joyless tradeoffs. Longevity demands a whole-life approach, not marketing-driven theories and rigid planning models. It’s financial preparation—not financial planning—that actually works.
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/watchdog-on-wall-street-with-chris-markowski/id570687608
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2PtgPvJvqc2gkpGIkNMR5i
WATCH and SUBSCRIBE on:
https://www.youtube.com/@WatchdogOnWallstreet/featured
Big investment firms are suddenly realizing that people are living longer, healthier lives—and treating it like a breakthrough. A new Morgan Stanley paper frames increased longevity as a transformational economic force, arguing that 21st-century finance will shift from accumulation to decades-long retirement drawdowns. But this isn’t new information, and the proposed solutions miss the point. Designing income models around 40-year retirement periods ignores how real people live, work, adapt, and evolve over time. Life doesn’t unfold in neat phases, and treating retirement as a prolonged financial drought forces unrealistic saving, delayed living, and joyless tradeoffs. Longevity demands a whole-life approach, not marketing-driven theories and rigid planning models. It’s financial preparation—not financial planning—that actually works.
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