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Elon Musk says saving for retirement ‘won’t matter’ in 10 or 20 years. Here’s why that’s dangerous advice

Elon Musk has once again ignited discourse; this time over something most people treat as foundational to financial security: retirement savings.

On a recent episode of the Moonshots with Peter Diamandis podcast, Business Insider reports, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO argued that the traditional idea of saving for retirement could become “irrelevant” in the next decade or two thanks to advances in artificial intelligence (AI), robotics and energy technologies. He claims these will usher in a new era of abundance.

Musk paints a bold, but fanciful, picture: one where machines handle most work, goods and services are plentiful and cheap, health care and education are freely accessible and a so-called “universal high income” ensures everyone’s basic needs are met. In that future, Musk says, worrying about squirreling money away for retirement “won’t matter.” But before you side with the world’s richest entrepreneur and abandon your 401(k), there’s an important reality check to consider.

Musk’s thesis hinges on an extreme vision of technological transformation; one in which AI, robotics and other innovations will boost productivity so dramatically that scarcity — the economic force that underpins money, work and saving — will effectively vanish.

In such a world, he argues, traditional retirement planning may lose its relevance.

That’s an optimistic and highly speculative idea of the future. Musk said he imagines the transition could be “bumpy,” potentially sparking social unrest and even a crisis of meaning as traditional work becomes less necessary (1).

It’s crucial to note that Musk isn’t offering personal finance advice in the conventional sense. He’s describing a theoretical future economy. Yet his influence means many people could interpret his comments as a green light to stop saving altogether — especially younger workers still in the early stages of building financial security.

Read More: The average net worth of Americans is a surprising $620,654. But it almost means nothing. Here’s the number that counts (and how to make it skyrocket)

Unlike Musk, most Americans don’t have billion-dollar safety nets if the future doesn’t unfold as predicted. For many, retirement savings are far from irrelevant. In fact, they’re critically insufficient.

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