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by mattjenner
1819 days ago
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It's free money - however you look at it. Any government backing secures decades of contributions. Payments are often matched by an employer as a benefit. Contributions are pre-tax, thus saving real money. It's locked away, which means you can't spend it! Not getting a pension, of some kind, seems way riskier than living only with money in the immediate. As always, the trick is: 1. Compound interest
2. Long-term
3. Diversify investments
4. Maintain control and awareness
5. Compound interest It's a compound sandwich. |
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Investing in houses would at least be something physical. I can touch a house, I can see if it's still in a good state. I can verify it myself. I'm never going to know enough about finance to verify that for a pension scheme.
Maybe I'm taking too much of a binary approach here. I may end up doing both, but the stock market thing still feels like economic gambling voodoo to me.