Financial Planning Roadmap
See how the right financial plan helps you navigate change with confidence.
By Mike Winsor, CFP® 4 May 2023 2 min read
Periods of high inflation can impact your cost of living both immediately (like at the grocery store) and in the future (like the amount you’ll need to retire). In this article, we’ll review each impact and how having an up-to-date financial plan can help you to manage and mitigate them.
While inflation generally impacts salaries as well as expenses, the increase in wages hasn’t kept pace with inflation:
Source: Statistics Canada tables 14-10-023-01 and 18-10-0004-01
There is another element to this to consider though, as wages are expressed before tax, while expenses involve after-tax dollars. Let’s look at an example using the average year-over-year changes in 2022, rounded to the nearest per cent:
Income: 3%
Expenses: 7%
While most economic conversations will focus on nominal versus real wage growth (i.e. wage growth as a percentage versus wage growth less inflation as a percentage), the actual cost of living comparison and impact on net savings can be overlooked.
While governments are working hard to rein in inflation, another understated ramification is that even if inflation rates revert to the norm, the long-term increase to your retirement savings needs will likely have already changed. This is because after high-inflation events, prices generally fail to revert to their previous levels (as that would require significant negative inflation—also known as deflation, which is not the Bank of Canada’s stated goal).
Let’s look at a simplified example of this effect using the following assumptions:
What happens if inflation jumps by 7% to begin your first year of retirement before returning to 2.1% for the rest of retirement? How does this compare to your original plan from before the 7% increase?
While this will feel like an annual increase of $3,850/year ($115,500 over 30 years), when factoring in long-term inflation, the total increase over 30 years would be $158,657. Depending on your financial situation, a change like this may merit a review of your financial plan.
It is also worth noting that this increase in retirement funding needed would be in addition to the reduced pre-retirement savings effect we discussed in the first section.
Even a short-term increase in inflation can have long-term impacts on your retirement plan. Updating your plan regularly can help limit the amount of work to be done to offset any increases while helping to avoid surprises down the road. Don’t have a financial plan? Get in touch with a financial advisor to get started.
See how the right financial plan helps you navigate change with confidence.
1Per the long-term rate for inflation in the 202 FP Canada Projection Assumption Guidelines. Source: Source: Statistics Canada
2 Source: Statistics Canada https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/11-402-x/2011000/chap/prices-prix/prices-prix02-eng.htm
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