Common misconceptions, assumptions, and behavioral biases often prevent people from building robust and flexible retirement plans-and this is an enormous problem. If you don't know your decisions are based on false assumptions, how can you avoid making serious mistakes?
Rewirement: Rewiring the Way You Think about Retirement! offers a solution. Under the expert guidance of Jamie P. Hopkins, Esq., CFP(R), RICP(R), you'll learn to identify problems that might sabotage your savings while learning how to build and implement the retirement plan you need.
Considered one of the top forty financial services professionals under the age of forty by InvestmentNews, Hopkins provides an accessible and actionable ten-step process for building your retirement income plan. You'll discover the basics of retirement planning, how to tap into home equity, and how best to use employer-sponsored plans. At the same time, you'll learn how to prepare for long-term care while protecting yourself against market risks.
Essential reading for anyone who needs to make quality financial decisions, Rewirement lays out the process needed to develop a retirement income plan in easily understood steps. Do you need to rewire your retirement thinking? Would you know if you did?
About the Author: Jamie P. Hopkins, Esq., CFP(R), RICP(R), is one of the nation's leading retirement planning experts. He is a professor of taxation at the American College of Financial Services and the director of the New York Life Center for Retirement Income.
Hopkins's academic credentials include a BA in political science from Davidson College, a JD with honors from the Villanova School of Law, an MBA from Villanova University, and an LLM from Temple University. He is certified as a chartered life underwriter (CLU), retirement income certified professional (RICP), certified financial planner (CFP), and chartered financial consultant (ChFC).
Hopkins is passionate about educating consumers on financial best practices. InvestmentNews selected him as one of their top forty financial services professionals under the age of forty and the American Bar Association recognized him as one of the top forty young attorneys in the country.