Pensions: too big to NOT fail
This is why retirement plans should NEVER be administered by government.
And the shocks to the economy to come out of this will be staggering. Mark my words, this could be the piece of straw that breaks the economy's back.
And the shocks to the economy to come out of this will be staggering. Mark my words, this could be the piece of straw that breaks the economy's back.
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The only retirement plans I support are individual plans managed and invested in by me and me alone.
Jan
(But since I also continue to work...when would I collect the SS? Can't I just have my money back? <plaintive while>)
Joe
Jan
Jan
But chances are it won't happen, and we'll have a whole generation, maybe two, that doesn't get to retire, ever.
ERISA needs to be amended so that if government workers' pension funds aren't prepaid (either by the employees or taxpayers) then future taxpayers have no duty to add anything to them, regardless of any promises they've gotten written into law. The relationship between those workers and the employing entity is simply so close that the legal concept of "undue influence" applies.
"This can only fail if the government fails, and that will never happen."
Those are just a couple of quotes that I've heard over the years. As long as the government is involved, we have nothing to worry about. It sounded unpatriotic to believe anything else. When I finally learned enough to know better, I was amazed at what a phoney bill of goods I was being sold, by people I thought I could trust who knew better, but had an agenda. Just one more definition of evil.
The problem with pension funds is that they assume a static 8-10% return. They don't ever adjust themselves to the REAL returns of the market, and we haven't seen 8% returns in more than a decade. And most pension funds don't invest in stocks because they are too risky - they invest in AAA or AA Bonds (like municipal bonds), which are very low risk, but have a correspondingly low return.
Nearly every government or union pension fund in the United States is under water in a big way. You can see a list of those so bad off they had to notify the Department of Labor here: (http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/criticalstatusno...). A watchdog site here (http://www.nilrr.org/nilrr-research/mult...) makes my eyes goggle.