The Prudent Professor
Planning and Saving for a Worry-Free Retirement from Academe

Cloth: 978 1 57922 467 7
Price: $75.00
Published: May 2011 

Paper: 978 1 57922 468 4
Price: $24.95
Published: May 2011 

Ebook: 978 1 57922 550 6
Price: $19.99 About E-Books
Published: February 2012 

Lib Ebook: 978 1 57922 549 0
Price: $75.00 About Library E-book
Published: March 2012 

Publisher: Stylus Publishing
352 pp., 6" x 9"
This is a guide for anyone in the academy – faculty member, administrator or professional staff – at whatever point she or he may be along the career path.

Whether you are a newly-minted Ph.D. landing your first job, at mid career, or even already retired and concerned about how long your money might last, Ed Bridges offers you a straightforward, easy-to-grasp, and structured way to think about money, learn how it works, understand the priorities for your stage in life, determine your objectives, and develop a personal plan most likely to achieve them.

Why a book specifically for those who work in higher education? The chances are that your retirement funds are mostly invested in TIAA-CREF funds, and that the plans created by the different institutions where you have worked, or will work, impose sometimes conflicting limitations of how you can manage your retirement money. This is potentially complex terrain with which many professional financial advisors are unfamiliar. This book provides ample guidance for you to manage your retirement funds, but if you do prefer to seek professional advice, it sets out the criteria for choosing a reliable advisor, and may even be a book from which your advisor can benefit if he or she is not fully conversant with TIAA-CREF’s offerings, and the quirks of academic retirement plans.

What makes this book unique is that Ed Bridges shares with you his self-education about the risky business of investing and retirement planning. As he writes, “In schooling myself, I adopted the mind-set that I had used as a social scientist for the past forty-six years. I distinguished between fact and opinion and scrutinized the evidence behind every author’s claims; moreover, I searched for research that might corroborate or refute these claims. In the process, I learned a great deal about the route I should have taken to retirement from the time I accepted my first academic appointment to the time I submitted my intention to retire. Join me as I relive my long journey so that you may avoid my wrong turns and succeed in reaching your ultimate destination, a worry-free retirement, despite the risks and uncertainties you will surely face when you retire.”

The book includes simple questionnaires and worksheets to help you determine where you stand, and think through your options.


Table of Contents:
Preface
Introduction: A Preview of Retirement

Part One: Saving for Retirement
1 Getting There: A Look in the Rearview Mirror
2 How Much Do I Need to Save?
3 Do Investment Costs Matter?
4 Should I Invest in Index or Actively Managed Funds? 3
5 What Should My Mix of Assets Be?
6 Why Should I Diversify?
7 What Investing Principles Would Serve Me Well?
8 How Do I Build an Investment Portfolio?
9 What Role Should TIAA-CREF Retirement Annuities Play in My Investment Portfolio?
10 What Role Should TIAA-CREF Retirement Class
Mutual Funds Play in My Investment Portfolio?

Part Two: Preretirement Considerations
11 Can I Afford to Retire?
12 Should I Purchase an Annuity?
13 When Should I Start Taking Social Security?
14 Do I Need Long-Term Care Insurance?
15 How Much Should I Set Aside for Health Insurance?
16 How Do I Put My Financial House in Order?
17 Should We Sell Our Home and Relocate?
18 Is a Reverse Mortgage Right for Me?
19 How Should I Use a Financial Planner?
20 Can I Count on TIAA-CREF’s Financial Services?

Part Three: Creating a Pension Plan
21 How Do I Maximize My Retirement Income and
Financial Security?
22 What Are My Income Options With TIAA-CREF?
23 Should I Incorporate a TIAA Traditional Payout Annuity Into My Pension Plan?
24 Should I Incorporate a TIAA-CREF Variable-Income Annuity Into My Pension Plan?
25 Should I Use Systematic Withdrawal as a Major Source of My Pension Income in Retirement?

Part Four: Remaining Solvent
26 Mirror, Mirror on the Wall, What Is the Greatest Threat of All?
27 How Can I Protect My Nest Egg Against Huge Losses?
28 How Can I Protect My Nest Egg Against Fraud?

Part Five: Beyond Retirement
29 What If I Finish in the Black?
30 Money, Happiness, and a Fulfilling Retirement

Appendixes
A Illustration
B Possible Questions to Ask When Seeking Financial Advice
C Experiences With Vanguard’s Financial Planning Services
D Planning Tools & Calculators
E Special Issues for Women
F Must Reading for an Informed Investor
G Determining Minimum Distribution Requirement
H Operating Expenses for CREF Variable Annuity Accounts, 1997–2008
I Total Investment Costs for the CREF Variable Equity Accounts
J Publications
K TIAA-CREF: Strengths, Shortcomings, and Needed Changes
L Formula for Calculating Annual Income Increases/Decreases From Variable Annuities
M Historic Returns: Worst Case, One Year
N Annual Income Changes for TIAA-CREF Variable Annuity Accounts, 1996–2005
O TIAA-CREF Variable Income Changes, 2001–2003
P Annual Review of Your Savings and Retirement Plan

Investing Terms
References
About the Authors
Index


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Reviews & Endorsements:
"Bottom Line: Do I wish I had this book early in my academic career and at the beginning of my retirement? Absolutely! Should those who have thus far ignored retirement planning study its contents and then act? You bet! The sages on this Forum are already familiar with much of the book's advice and TIAA CREF's offerings, but as they are all financial literature and TC junkies, they would still enjoy reading and referring to it."
- Stan "Economic Man" , Morningstar Forum
"In The Prudent Professor, Edwin Bridges, professor emeritus of Stanford, has provided an incredibly helpful guide to investment success. Targeted to members of the academic community, the book draws on his own careful research and long personal experience in building -- and protecting -- his retirement funds. He describes with candor where he went right--avoiding potholes--and where he went wrong--falling into them. His blunt appraisals of working with TIAA-CREF and with Vanguard (I should know!) are invaluable, indeed priceless."
- John C. Bogle, Founder , The Vanguard Group