A Personal Financial Simulation for Japanese Hospital-Employed Physicians
Yosuke Takakusagi

TL;DR
This study explores how Japanese hospital-employed physicians can save and invest to reach financial security through simulations.
Contribution
The study introduces a financial simulation model tailored for Japanese hospital-employed physicians to achieve affluence.
Findings
Physicians can accumulate 100 million yen by saving 10% of income with 4% annual returns over 40 years.
Using NISA reduces taxes and increases investment returns for hospital-employed physicians.
Abstract
Introduction Physicians in Japan are generally high earners, but many face challenges in accumulating sufficient financial assets due to a lack of financial education. This study aimed to examine the savings and investment strategies necessary for hospital-employed physicians in Japan to reach affluence. Materials and methods A financial simulation was conducted using average income data for hospital-employed physicians, considering different saving rates (5-40%) and annual investment returns (1-10%). The study also assessed the tax-saving effect of the Nippon Individual Savings Account (NISA). Results Hospital-employed physicians can accumulate 100 million Japanese yen in financial assets by saving at least 10% of their income with an annual return of 4% over 40 years. The use of NISA can further reduce taxes, increasing overall returns. Conclusions By adopting appropriate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFinancial Literacy, Pension, Retirement Analysis · Global Health Care Issues · Healthcare Policy and Management
