Gordon Gekko
Registered User
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Gordon,
The point being made, is starting a pension at 43, not, as you are quoting, paying into a pension at 43.
Completely different scenarios.
I would much rather invest in a property at that age than start a pension.
There are so many reasons that out weight this.
10 years into the pension, god forbid your circumstances change..your goosed unless you can continue with the same payments and employers contributions.
Stephen,
I would much rather invest in a property at that age than start a pension.
There are so many reasons that out weight this
Gordon,
You'd good with figures and can manipulate them to suit your argument any way you like.
When I started paying quite a reasonable pensionable amount over the last 20 years, had I put the same into a property in 1996
and had it generated 20 years rent, plus the amount that I have paid in contributions pension wise, I would be in a much better financial position than i am now.
These are hard facts, not some financial list I cobbled together to suit my argument.
Paying into a pension makes sense if the rules don't change .
There's going to be a massive shortfall in future years as we age as a nation , I firmly believe the government will raid private pensions like they have already to cover this shortfall so that's my main gripe with paying into a pension .
If I was on high tax I'd pay some money into a pension but no more than 50% of what I wanted to invest , I'd manage the other 50% myself just in case they government did get stuck in with levies again which imo is more than likely .
Paying into a pension makes sense if the rules don't change .
When I asked around at that time, would people start a pension at around the OP's age, 9 out of 10 said they wouldn't. And these were people who had started pensions donkeys years before.
@Sarenco - I didn't start the pension at that time as I didn't want the equivalent of a 2nd mortgage give or take and decided to pay off the mortgage quicker and then I can plan what to do. For me it was a case of being in control as much as possible.
Pension rules will change in the future. Of that I have no doubt.
So will the rules on income tax, capital gains tax, PRSI, USC, LPT, DIRT, Exit Tax, stamp duty, etc.
We have now introduced rent control legislation - who can say for sure that we won't see the reintroduction of exchange controls in our lifetimes? Or controls on the ownership of precious metals?
Never mind the prospect of the State failing to honour deposit guarantees the next time we have a financial emergency.
Sure, pensions come with political risk but what doesn't? All investments are subject to political risk.
Again, a pension is just a tax efficient investment vehicle. That's all.
There is no particular reason to believe that pension vehicles are exposed to any greater level of political risk than any other type of investment structure.
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