Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke
Bernanke has been in charge of the Fed during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression and has lowered the benchmark interest rate to near zero. He began his second four-year term in 2010, earning an annual salary of $199,700. As a former Princeton professor, he earns an additional amount from textbook royalties -- reported at between $150,000 and $1.1 million in 2010.
It's disheartening when your investments decline as the market rises, but you shouldn't necessarily use the stock market as a financial benchmark, especially when planning for retirement. The volatility from one day to the next is enough to send you reeling. Instead, craft a plan that will meet your needs for the long term, and don't sweat the day-to-day stock market fluctuations.