(Whatever Pouf Is)
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Sorry about
yesterday. My $127 four-star Priceline.com
room in And now . . . THE WINNER IS Charles! Nominated
for a Fashion Group International “Rising Star” award last month – he won.
Last week he had a nice mention
in the Times. And Sunday, his Fall
fashion show played to a packed crowd (we called and had the football game
moved back so as not to conflict) . . . as reviewed here
by Style.com complete with a slide show of all 47 “looks.” If a picture is
worth 1,000 words, I’ve just written a 47,000-word column to make up for yesterday. Note the $300,000
antique French couch in the background. Actually,
Charles painted it – himself – a couple of nights before the show. Note, too, the “hoop skirts” reminiscent of So now you’re
wondering, is this like the old Steven Wright line I’m
so fond of? (“The sign said ‘Breakfast Anytime,’
so I ordered French toast during the Renaissance.”) (Yes that Steven
Wright, the one who said he’d “kill for a Nobel Peace Prize.”) And the answer
is, no, Steven Wright is not on Charles’s radar screen, so far as I know. Rather, the inspiration for the show was “Cake,” a new ballet about the life of Marie Antoinette
he has asked to costume for the American Ballet Theatre’s junior company. “I inevitably found myself
lost in Eighteenth Century France,” he told his Boswell (that would be me) – “plutocrats,
the poor, the stirrings of egalité and calls for CHANGE . . . the silks and chiffons but the need
for something practical . . . democratizing beauty . . . fashion
for a new age aborning . . . yes, we can
. . . ready on day one . . . does the knife loom for our subprime excess? “This is what comes of
sketching Eighteenth Century French ballet costumes while watching MSNBC.” And he went on: “I was struck by the sheer technology of the period, what had to go
into making the old hoop structure showing lightness and wealth
. . . that was all about technology. Whale bone, light metal – fantastic when you
think about it. Just as astonishing for
its time as the amazing fabrics and technology we get to play with today . . .
the memory taffetas that evoke grand evenings – but you can sleep in on a plane
and smooth out (and practically hose down) . . . the recycled industrial mesh
that holds up our pouf – the skirt wraps the body for ease of fit as the silk
wraps the mesh to maintain its shape.
This mesh also gives lightness and rise to the shoulders of the heather
jersey-lined featherweight wool tweed jacket . . . It’s all about the fit . . .
it’s all about empowerment . . . it’s all about moving forward mindful of the
past.” I have only the
vaguest idea what any of that means, but aren’t the clothes pretty? NOT SO RICHISTAN Judy Bailey: “I
see that by the terms of Richistan
my partner and I just make it. We have,
by living frugally and modestly, and by having valuable hobbies such as sewing,
tile setting, and carpentry, accumulated a nest egg of about $800,000. Adding
the value of our house, about $400,000, we are there, even though our income
has always been very modest. Most of my working life, I was paid like a clerk,
a free-lance editor, or a librarian. But consider my friend Terry, who has been
a teacher all his life. I am sure his
savings do not enroll him in the ranks of Richistan,
but in many ways he is richer than me by far. He is working in a special
teaching environment which allows him to make $80,000 per year – more than
twice my income – and he need not save a penny of that, for when he retires in
a few years, he will have a tidy income guaranteed for life, and including
generous health insurance. Meanwhile, my partner and I will have only the
income that can be generated by our nest egg, plus Social Security payments
based on the low wages we’ve made all these years, and we must go onto the open
market for health coverage. So who is richer?
. . . Folks who work for the
government and in those fewer and fewer industries that have traditional
pension plans have a kind of security that the rest of us only dream
about. Why is it that
they are not included in Richistan? And how
do you figure that a nest egg of a million dollars will generate $72,000
between 65 and 95?” F Several years ago I
announced somewhere that it now required $5 million to be a millionaire. Today, it probably requires $10 million or –
if we’re talking millionaire (with
the kind of italics the word used to deserve) – $25 million. That
said, having a $1 million nest egg to supplement
Social Security is still vastly better than what most people will have at 65. (Most people, sadly, will have next to nothing.) Meanwhile,
the $72,000 figure I used is what you could withdraw each year for 30 years if,
over those 30 years, you were earning 6% on the funds that remained. (Think of it as the reverse of a 6% $1
million mortgage that would be paid off after 30 years of $72,000 annual
payments.) But 6% after inflation in a
Roth IRA (say) – while not pie-in-the-sky – is in no way guaranteed. So this was a fairly aggressive illustration
designed to encourage people to be frugal and build a nest egg. I wanted
to get to a dazzling, but not totally bogus, number to inspire people to
save. But the implication of your
question is spot on: once you do retire, the frugal thing to do is not to
withdraw $72,000 a year from each million you’ve saved up, because you might not be able to earn 6% after inflation –
or you might live past 95. And I hope you will. Bunny Lytle: “My
understanding is that one can only safely take between 3% to 4 % annualy adjusted for inflation if you don’t want to go broke eventually. (May
not be true as brokerage firms are my source.)” F No – I agree, and have always urged
people not to assume they will be able to earn more than 3%
after-tax-after-inflation. In the retirement
section of my software, may it rest in peace (ohhhhh how I miss the gigantic
royalties, ohhhhh
how I miss the fun of sending wish-lists to programmers who’d grant them
brilliantly, ohhhhh
DOS, sweet DOS; but I digress), whenever anyone assumed a higher than 3% return
above inflation, they’d get an error message: It’s no cinch to
outpace inflation by even 3% over the long run.
You have chosen yields that outpace your inflation assumption by
[whatever they entered %]. We hope
you’re successful, but if you wish to change your entries, press ESC and do so
now. So the 3% idea is
valid. But remember that if you don’t need the
money to last forever, you can take more. A 90-year-old expecting
not to live past 108 could (obviously) withdraw a lot more than 3% a year.
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Andrew Tobias