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Three of Canada’s foremost retirement and life educators bring their collective insights, experience and knowledge to bear on the problems that Canadians face in planning for retirement. Using 10 key planning principals, the authors outline a perspective on planning that incorporates lifestyle planning, management of credit and debt, investment planning, insurance and risk management, tax efficiency, legal and estate planning and income design.
What readers have said about this book
I have been reading and studying the book as I went along – using the opportunity to learn what to do next in my own life. At 54, returning from South Africa back here to a year of ill health, low work, culture shock and like many, last year was not good for my investments. I took life head on, lost more than won, but I am still standing. This book has given me new strength to evaluate what I have and a plan has begun to emerge that has me smiling for the first time since arriving back home. You say it’s never too late – your book just reminded me, this game is far from over.
So thank you
- Raymond Radcliffe
Overall, I like your book! I find the information easy to understand and quite relevant and practical. I also like the conversational tone of the writing as well as the variety of expression that comes from having three authors.
- Carly King, Ontario
These retirement experts have experience helping over 50,000 Albertans achieve personal freedom. They succeeded in condensing all their expertise into this practical and most helpful 200-page book. If you read nothing else about retirement, read this!
- Nell Smith, Calgary, Alberta
From Larry MacDonald's review - "I was also pleasantly surprised to read advice not normally heard from financial planners. They are often accused of emphasizing the investing side of financial planning (particularly buying mutual funds), but there wasn’t much of that in this book. This Personal Finance book had me gasping". Click here to read the review and find out why he was gasping
- Larry MacDonald, Canadian Business
I did find the book to be very impressive because it contains the kind of straight talk that you usually don’t hear — certainly not from financial institutions that loves to project retirement as a time to laze around the cottage or walk carefree on a beach or indulge in a favourite sport, something quite different from the reality. One of the authors, Jim Yih, quite apty, calls this retirement pornography. Canadians who are starting to plan for their retirement or already planning it will find this book to be invaluable. Click here to read the entire review of the book.
Larry also included 10 Things I Wish Someone Told Me About Retirement on his Christmas Gift Ideas List
- Canadian Capitalist, Moneysense
More Information:
To buy 10 Things I Wish Someone Told Me About Retirement, click here
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