{"id":4091,"date":"1971-10-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1971-10-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1971-vol-52-no-10-building-an-estate\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:45:35","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:45:35","slug":"october-1971-vol-52-no-10-building-an-estate","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1971-vol-52-no-10-building-an-estate\/","title":{"rendered":"October 1971 &#8211; VOL. 52, NO. 10 &#8211; Building An Estate"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">A few people have the short-sighted                     and selfish attitude that what they earn they should enjoy                     by spending here and now.<\/p>\n<p> Most people are not spendthrifts like that. They know that                     pleasure enjoyed at the expense of their own or another&#8217;s                     pain is not something to delight in. But not all of them know                     how to go about striking a balance between immediate enjoyment                     and future comfort.<\/p>\n<p>The secret is to build an estate. Everyone has an estate                     of some sort, even if it consists only of the clothes he stands                     up in, but the estate that counts toward happiness and security                     and serenity is the one deliberately set up and developed.<\/p>\n<p>The worry may not show itself, but every man is aware subconsciously                     of a yearning toward a feeling of financial security, and                     though they may stifle all signs of it, wives and children                     who are in the dark about the future live under a cloud of                     foreboding.<\/p>\n<p>While a man lives, he shares with his family the advantages                     of his life. Upon his death, these advantages are replaced                     in part by a monetary benefit he has had the foresight to                     provide.<\/p>\n<p>In its sentimental aspect a human life may be altogether                     priceless, but there is no denying that there are hard financial                     facts to be faced.<\/p>\n<p>The bread-winner of the family has economic value. As long                     as he stays in the picture, earning money, all is serene.                     The family enjoys the essentials of life, food, clothing and                     shelter, plus as many of the &#8220;extras&#8221; as are permitted by                     his earning capacity. When the bread-winner is taken out of                     the picture his income stops, but the needs of his family                     continue.<\/p>\n<h3>Not only sentiment<\/h3>\n<p>This rational concept disposes of the long-held thought                     that it was somehow awful to attach a dollar value to a human                     life. The emotional upset caused by death is terrible, and                     the loss of affection irreparable, but the fact cannot be                     ignored that life must go on for those who are left. How free                     it is from hardship will have been decided in large part by                     the provision made by the affectionate bread-winner.<\/p>\n<p>He will have gone about this in a business-like way, estimating                     the need, accumulating and conserving his resources, investing                     intelligently, and using all the other facilities which the                     modern economic and social structure has to offer for meeting                     the emergencies arising out of the uncertainties of life.<\/p>\n<p>Doing this has a bonus value in that it makes his lifetime                     more secure and his retirement more free from worry. As C.                     Elliott Smith says in <em>Personal Finances <\/em>(Alexander                     Hamilton Institute, New York, 1956): &#8220;Building up an estate                     creates a sense of security in the builder himself and give                     him the satisfaction of having something to show for his years                     of effort&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>To plan an estate requires that you study your own and your                     family&#8217;s needs thoughtfully and imaginatively; that you plan                     practically and economically to meet those needs, and that                     you make sure, by consulting people who know about such things,                     that you are moving in the right direction.<\/p>\n<h3>The money value of a man<\/h3>\n<p>We must fail in any attempt to estimate the value of a man                     to his family on the basis of affection and the psychological                     satisfaction derived from the fact of living together as a                     family, but his money value is a real, tangible thing.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, the practice of estimating a man&#8217;s money value                     reaches far back into antiquity. Before the reign of Alfred                     the Great, which began in 871, Anglo-Saxon law set a value                     on men&#8217;s lives, called the <em>were<\/em>. Since all men&#8217;s lives                     were not of equal value, the <em>were <\/em>varied according                     to the rank of the individual, so that more compensation for                     the death of one man was decreed than for another.<\/p>\n<p>About forty years ago it occurred to Dr. Louis I. Dublin                     and Dr. Alfred J. Lotka, statisticians of international repute,                     that the tabulation should be brought up to date, and they                     published their book called <em>The Money Value of a Man <\/em>(Ronald                     Press, 1946).<\/p>\n<p>A man&#8217;s money value is individual. You cannot find it by                     taking the earnings of the whole male population and dividing                     that by the number of men in the labour force. You must do                     your own arithmetic on the data applying to you personally.<\/p>\n<p>If you are a man of 30 years of age you may, according to                     a Canadian table of life expectancy, anticipate about 42 more                     years of life. If you average $6,000 a year during that time,                     your anticipated earnings are $252,000. If you earn that $6,000                     by working 244 eight-hour days a year, every hour is worth                     $3.07, and if you put aside the earnings of one hour every                     working day for a year you will have added $749 to your estate.                     In 30 years&#8217; time this annual saving, invested at 5 per cent                     a year, would add to your estate roughly $50,000.<\/p>\n<p>To contrast the practicality of this way of figuring and                     the loose sentimental way, consider the fine-sounding phrase                     &#8220;you are worth your weight in gold&#8221;. If you weigh 150 pounds                     avoirdupois then your value in gold, at the rate of $35 per                     troy ounce, is $76,500; if you add weight as you grow older                     then as a heavyweight of 200 pounds your gold value will be                     $102,000.<\/p>\n<p>Your money value, based upon your earning power, provides                     a rational basis for planning your estate so as to meet the                     responsibilities you owe to yourself and to your family.<\/p>\n<h3>A family partnership<\/h3>\n<p>The family should be regarded as a business partnership                     in addition to the values it has socially. It should learn                     about the facts of economic life so as to be able to manage                     money matters with a minimum of anxiety. The more minor crises                     your family learns to solve with your help, the easier will                     be the solving of major crises when it is on its own.<\/p>\n<p>The perplexity which faces a woman whose husband has just                     died may be lightened by his thoughtful arrangement of his                     estate during his lifetime.<\/p>\n<p>Some men neglect to take their wives into the secret of                     managing finances. They labour under the delusion that the                     hand that rocks the cradle will not appear so appealing and                     charming if it helps him to count the cash income and the                     outgo. That is not a reasonable attitude. Every man is aware                     of his own desire to know about his future: let him think,                     then, of his wife&#8217;s even more imperative need to know where                     she stands.<\/p>\n<p>A man sometimes finds it hard to keep his financial balance:                     how, then, unless he allows her to participate in handling                     family finances, is his wife to learn how to do it on her                     own? The days of widowhood are strange, mournful and difficult                     days, which may be made easier if the family has been shown                     the financial foundation built for them and instructed in                     how to erect a new way of life on it.<\/p>\n<p>Some men, fewer now than a couple of generations ago, are                     so situated that they cannot hope to do more than provide                     their families with a decent living, carry enough life insurance                     to tide over a transition period, and build up a small savings                     account. But even a moderate income, if wisely managed, will                     provide something for the future.<\/p>\n<p>An affectionate man, one, that is, with more than surface                     affection, will go to great lengths of planning so as to continue                     to care for his family during the time when he is not there                     to see to it personally.<\/p>\n<p>Some men take advantage of the New Year or Income Tax time                     to prepare an annual &#8220;statement of affairs.&#8221; This is done                     with two purposes in mind: for their own information and to                     give help should someone else have to take over management.                     The statement need only list assets and liabilities. The assets                     include real estate, amounts in savings deposits, investments,&#8221;                     insurance policies. The liabilities include mortgages, taxes                     owing, other debts and obligations.<\/p>\n<h3>An estate<\/h3>\n<p>In Canada there is a very healthy and widespread feeling                     of responsibility for the welfare of dependents. It is accepted                     as just a normal part of a successful life. Those who are                     to benefit by the estate start to attain security from the                     moment an estate programme is put into action. The builder                     profits also through peace of mind and the consciousness of                     having a purpose in life.<\/p>\n<p>Building an estate does not involve higher mathematics or                     use of a slide rule. It can be done with the aid of simple                     arithmetic, plus a determination to sort out the things that                     matter and give them priority.<\/p>\n<p>Your first task is to find out as nearly as you can exactly                     where you are now and how far it is to where you want to go.                     Check the facts as they are today, weigh your responsibilities,                     estimate the factors you can in some measure control, take                     account of factors you cannot control, forecast needs, and                     plot a course.<\/p>\n<p>After defining your target area in this way you will set                     interim goals, making a note of dates when you will check                     your progress and also make sure that you have not lost sight                     of the essentials. Chance or good fortune may be expected                     to cover up some shortcomings, but it is just as well not                     to leave loose ends.<\/p>\n<p>It is possible for the head of a family, in consultation                     with his wife, to make up a more or less detailed estimate                     of the income his family would require year after year, with                     a view to providing them with a sufficient estate to yield                     that income.<\/p>\n<p>A good planning chart will have three divisions: What you                     own; What you owe; Reconciliation. The first will list real                     estate, furniture, savings, stocks, automobile, and other                     property; the second will cover amounts owing on mortgage,                     car, other instalment purchases, and loans; the third will                     tabulate what life insurance policies, social security benefits,                     savings, retirement benefits and all other assets, are needed                     and can be acquired to bring the first and second columns                     into balance.<\/p>\n<p>Another method is to make a triple list covering the present                     time, the time of retirement and the time when you are no                     longer there to manage things.<\/p>\n<p>List every expense under such main headings as: shelter                     (including rent, mortgage payments, taxes, property insurance,                     repairs, heat, light, telephone); food (including working                     day lunches); clothing (purchase, cleaning, laundry); transportation                     (car, parking, licenses, bus, commuter train and subway);                     vacation; medical (drugs, dental and eye care, group and medicare                     payments); income tax; charitable donations; church contributions;                     life and other personal insurance premiums; gifts.<\/p>\n<p>You will have three columns. Under &#8220;Present&#8221; you will list                     the amounts currently expended; under &#8220;Retirement&#8221; leave out                     the items which will not apply (like travel to business, lunches);                     under &#8220;Estate&#8221; leave out the items which do not apply (e.g.                     life insurance) and reduce those for which the cost will be                     lower (vacation, laundry, medical). The result will be a realistic                     three-sided picture of your money value and the demands upon                     it.<\/p>\n<p>Some persons may feel that making an estimate of this kind                     is too troublesome, but the fact is that it is a trouble-saver                     and a mind-saver.<\/p>\n<p>The more complete your plan is to start with, the easier                     it will be to operate and the fewer adjustments you will have                     to make in it. Also, and this is important, the planning you                     do now for your own and your family&#8217;s future is the expression                     of your personality.<\/p>\n<h3>On making a will<\/h3>\n<p>To dispose of our property in the way we wish is one of                     the privileges of the democratic way of life. We should not                     reject this freedom by leaving the job to an austere government                     department.<\/p>\n<p>Your will is the instrument by which you express your well-considered                     wishes regarding distribution of your property. To shrink                     from will-making is to endanger the comfort and the well-being                     of your family.<\/p>\n<p>This age prides itself on facing realities starkly, but                     there is one reality some people refuse to look at ( that                     of death. Emotions become mixed up with practicalities.<\/p>\n<p>Sir James Barrie, author of <em>Peter Pan<\/em>, wrote a play                     called <em>The Will<\/em>. In it, a husband and wife go to a                     lawyer to draw up a will. She is so tearful that her husband                     and the lawyer try to prepare the will without ever mentioning                     the words &#8220;death&#8221; or &#8220;widow&#8221;, or anything to suggest that                     the husband might not live forever.<\/p>\n<p>Vital persons face facts and plan their goals. They take                     all the measures necessary to influence and ensure the fulfilment                     of their aims and desires. They know that a will is a necessary                     and unique instrument. When it takes effect they will no longer                     be on hand to give testimony or explain their desires.<\/p>\n<p>What they want to do in the way of giving protection and                     care to their families must be clearly set forth in the will                     so as to satisfy legal requirements.<\/p>\n<p>No generalization can be made about making a will except                     one: everybody should make one. An extreme example is given                     in <em>Changing Times<\/em>, the Kiplinger Magazine. Suppose                     you had no money put aside, and lived in a furnished apartment                     with only your clothes to call your own. Suppose that the                     bus on which you rode to work one morning was in an accident                     in which you were killed. Someone ( your widow, mother, children,                     sister ( should be able to collect enough damages from the                     negligent party to at least pay your funeral expenses. But                     if you left no will naming a beneficiary and an executor there                     would be difficulty in establishing a legal right to put in                     a claim.<\/p>\n<p>Consider a more common occurrence: a man who owns real estate                     dies without making a will. His widow will be greatly hampered.                     She cannot sell the real estate to support herself and her                     children without an order from a court.<\/p>\n<p>Some people think that the settlement of an estate is more                     expensive under a will than when there is none. The reverse                     is almost always true. The lawyer, notary, or other expert                     who draws up your will is aware of the ways in which to conserve                     money. There are exemptions from succession duties of which                     to-take advantage: for children, certain gift bequests, property                     bequeathed for religious, charitable or educational purposes,                     and others.<\/p>\n<p>As Lawrence Washington says in his book <em>How to Plan Your                     Financial Security<\/em>: &#8220;Everyone is taxed in one way or another                     from the cradle to the grave, but the man who saves is also                     taxed after he reaches it.&#8221; Death creates an immediate tax                     liability; the thing to do is to have the liability as small                     as the law allows, and this is a job for people who know the                     ropes.<\/p>\n<h3>Building an estate<\/h3>\n<p>When you start building an estate for your future years                     or for your family you need to be first of all a realist.                     Things are not always what they seem. For example, your <em>real                     <\/em>income is far below the dollar amount opposite your name                     in the pay-roll record. The cost of living index ( or, as                     it is now called, the consumer price index ( enables you to                     get a closer approximation of your purchasing power, because                     real income means the sum of the things you can buy with your                     money.<\/p>\n<p>Here is how to find out. The Federal Government publishes                     every month a figure which is an index of the cost of essential                     living needs in terms of the base year 1961 equalling 100.                     You divide your annual income (after deducting income taxes)                     by the consumer price index and multiply by 100. For example:                     your income after tax is $4,860; divide that by the current                     consumer price index, say 130, and multiply by 100, which                     gives you $3,738. That is your true buying power. Thus, you                     have $1,122 less buying power than if prices were stabilized                     at the 1961 figure. (It is also true that if prices were as                     they were in 1961 your dollar income might be less, but that                     does not affect the reality of your present purchasing power.)<\/p>\n<p>Besides the <em>level <\/em>of living, which is largely determined                     by the cost of things, you need to pay attention to the <em>standard                     <\/em>of living. This is not merely a matter of maintaining                     life through providing shelter, food and clothing: it has                     also something to do with social customs and individual tastes.<\/p>\n<p>Things which were looked upon only a few years ago as rare                     luxuries are now regarded as essential to comfort and self-respect,                     and combine with the essentials to make up a standard of living.                     The ordinary home in Canada has comforts which were not available                     even to kings a century ago.<\/p>\n<h3>Being budget-wise<\/h3>\n<p>The only sure way of providing that this standard shall                     be maintained now and in the future is by planning.<\/p>\n<p>The formula for proper administration of family finances                     so as to get the best value out of life now while making provision                     for later is not something you were born with. It is a matter                     of combining mature common sense, experience, power of will,                     and a few principles.<\/p>\n<p>Away back in 1938, before women became so interested in                     financial affairs, Ruth MacKay wrote a book she called <em>Money                     Without Men <\/em>(Farrar &amp; Rinehart). In it she tells about                     the value of budgets and adds: &#8220;The best budgets are those                     based on present expenditures, an estimate of one&#8217;s income                     and a little headwork to see that they come out even.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is no budget that will suit every family. Statistics                     that give the average amount spent on this and that are useful                     only to statisticians. Your family is a unique entity, and                     your budget must give expression to your aspirations.<\/p>\n<p>A budget that has estate planning in mind need not be a                     fearsome thing. It is an estimate of needs, a division of                     income, and a method of keeping control of expenditures: that                     is all.<\/p>\n<p>There is no room in a happy family for skinflints ( people                     who habitually examine the potato peelings to make sure they                     have been pared as thin as tissue paper. What is needed is                     a co-operative effort to get the most for your money, to establish                     priorities, and to ensure that considering the resources available                     your family members will get the greatest amount of satisfaction                     over their lifetimes.<\/p>\n<p>Three earlier <em>Monthly Letters <\/em>dealt with budgets                     in some detail: &#8220;On Making Ends Meet&nbsp;&#8230; Planning Personal                     Financial Stability&nbsp;&#8230; Planning Family Finances&#8221;. These                     are available through Royal Bank branches or direct from Head                     Office.<\/p>\n<h3>Saving and investing<\/h3>\n<p>Interest is not paid on money, but on what money does. If                     you hide your cash in a teapot it is idle, and you need not                     expect to lift the lid and find some dollars of interest added                     to your estate.<\/p>\n<p>If you put your cash in the bank, or pay it in premiums                     to a life insurance company, or invest it in stocks or bonds,                     it is put to work, and it is the work it does that pays you                     interest or dividends.<\/p>\n<p>Life insurance is probably the most basic tool of estate                     planning, and it is worthwhile to know about the principles                     on which it works. Henry Clay points out in his book <em>Economics                     <\/em>that some people profess to regard life insurance as a                     form of gambling, whereas it is the very reverse. The gambler                     converts a certainty into an uncertainty ( the certainty that                     he has his money into the uncertainty whether he will have                     more or less. The insurer converts an uncertainty that he                     will be able to meet his obligations in the event of a possible                     misfortune into the certainty that he will.<\/p>\n<p>Deciding on the form of insurance to carry need not be a                     bothersome problem. There are, pared to essentials, only three                     basic types of life policies: term, whole life and endowment.                     These are, of course, used by the estate planner in many combinations                     to meet his individual requirements. He shows lively interest                     in fitting his insurance into his present situation and needs                     and the future of his dependents. He does not merely buy a                     new policy from time to time as his income increases, but                     makes a programme to fit his particular family needs and his                     resources.<\/p>\n<h3>When to do it<\/h3>\n<p>Once you have decided to build an estate, using all the                     aids suggested here and others that you will think of, there                     is only one logical answer to the question &#8220;When should I                     start?&#8221; The task is easier now than it will ever be again.                     To start is not to say &#8220;This is it, once and forever.&#8221; A properly                     made plan is one that offers itself to change as time brings                     new responsibilities and changed resources.<\/p>\n<p>The act of starting provides a strong defence against worry,                     insecurity, financial instability and gloom. It will not multiply                     your income, but it certainly will help you to stop wasteful                     and unrewarding leaks in your outgo. It will enable you to                     concentrate your firepower on the decisive targets.<\/p>\n<p>You will be helped in your planning if you make a mental                     picture of the way you would like your family to live, and                     then work toward that objective. Making intelligent, co-ordinated                     sense out of your affairs in this way pays off in satisfaction                     and leaves you free to enjoy life.<\/p>\n<p>In doing all this planning you can be both clearheaded and                     gentle-hearted. In fact, it is not being gentle with one&#8217;s                     dependents or kind to yourself to be cloudy about what life                     now and in the future holds in store.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[51],"class_list":["post-4091","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-51"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>October 1971 - VOL. 52, NO. 10 - Building An Estate - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1971-vol-52-no-10-building-an-estate\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"October 1971 - VOL. 52, NO. 10 - Building An Estate - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"A few people have the short-sighted and selfish attitude that what they earn they should enjoy by spending here and now. 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Most people are not spendthrifts like that. They know that pleasure enjoyed at the expense of their own or another&#8217;s pain is not something to delight in. 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