"A retiree always needs to be careful about where he or she chooses to spend retirement, but with economic conditions changing so quickly it's even more important to make a good choice," says Warren R. Bland, author of "Retire in Style: 60 Outstanding Places Across the USA and Canada." Not all places are created equal when it comes to weathering economic woes like the current real estate slump, credit crunch and slowing job market, he says. Choosing the wrong place could carry serious ramifications.
"If you don't have a healthy local economy, it's like a cancer," says Bert Sperling, founder of Sperling's Best Places, which publishes reports on the best places to live based on data analysis. "There's less money for social services, for police patrols, even for infrastructure like fixing potholes." The widening subprime mortgage crisis makes ending up in the wrong part of town all too easy as well. "You could find yourself living in a deserted neighborhood," he warns, "where everyone else has fled" — or been forced out.
After all those decades of stashing money away for retirement, retirees should look for a place that will not only make them happy, but also keep their nest egg intact. Areas with a track record of slow, steady economic growth and home price appreciation are ones that will hold onto their value best, notes Walter Molony, a spokesman for the National Association of Realtors. These same places are also more likely to rebound quickly when nationwide economic conditions improve.
Here are seven recession-proof places our experts believe soon-to-be retirees should consider: