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What Long Life Spans Mean for Your Money and Career

During the 20th century, life expectancy in the U.S. climbed by almost 50%. That has huge implications for our finances. If you had a daughter born in 2000, her life expectancy at birth was age 84, versus 58 for women born a century earlier, according to the Social Security Administration. If you had a son born in 2000, his life expectancy at birth was age 80, compared with 52 for men born in 1900. Read more…

 

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