From 19eebed109242133d1b98a917ccf03625788e155 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Zachary Vance Date: Sun, 17 Jul 2022 21:27:26 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] fix 4 --- articles/retirement_math3.md | 4 +++- articles/retirement_math4.md | 2 +- 2 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/articles/retirement_math3.md b/articles/retirement_math3.md index 845d10d..6fe31db 100644 --- a/articles/retirement_math3.md +++ b/articles/retirement_math3.md @@ -15,6 +15,8 @@ Well, there is a caveat. You need an additional safety margin, even if the stock To summarize, if you live on $20K/year, and work at $60K/year, you can retire indefinitely in theory, after 12.5. In practice, add a safety margin. Now you're secure against random stock market problems, and you make *more money* over time. -Okay, but you don't want to retire forever. You're not immortal[^2]. Can you retire even earlier? Yes. +Okay, but you don't want to retire forever. You're not immortal[^1]. Can you retire even earlier? Yes. [why we aren't all broke](/articles/retirement_math4.md) + +[^1]: Yet diff --git a/articles/retirement_math4.md b/articles/retirement_math4.md index 9a5c5db..5ca3ccf 100644 --- a/articles/retirement_math4.md +++ b/articles/retirement_math4.md @@ -38,4 +38,4 @@ Some example numbers: In other words, if you can retire early, you need *way less money* to do it. That's a good reason all on its own. -[>> just give me a calculator](/retirement_math5) +[>> just give me a calculator](/articles/retirement_math5) -- 2.47.3