Retirement Roundup: What retirement looks like with no savings
News You Should Know
March 7, 2018
A digest of timely information and insight about finance, investing, and retirement.
This is what life without retirement savings looks like | The AtlanticRoberta Gordon never thought she’d still be alive at age 76. She definitely didn’t think she’d still be working. But every Saturday, she goes down to the local grocery store and hands out samples, earning $50 a day, because she needs the money. “I’m a working woman again,” she said in the common room of the senior apartment complex where she now lives, here in California’s Inland Empire. Gordon has worked dozens of odd jobs throughout her life—as a house cleaner, a home health aide, a telemarketer, a librarian, a fundraiser—but at many times in her life, she didn’t have a steady job that paid into Social Security. She didn’t receive a pension. And she definitely wasn’t making enough to put aside money for retirement.
A new idea: Mandatory retirement accounts to help workers delay claiming Social Security |MarketWatchA new proposal would create retirement saving accounts that would enable people to postpone the age at which they claim Social Security, thereby increasing monthly benefits.
The real reason the investor class hates pensions|The New York TimesNo issue in America today better illustrates the divergent interests of working Americans and the 1 percent than pension reform. Substantial empirical evidence shows that the 401(k), recently renounced by its own investors, is grossly inadequate and will leave tens of millions of Americans with insufficient retirement assets. And yet states and cities are busy converting traditional pensions into these failing 401(k)s or equivalents, to the great benefit of money managers and the finance class. 401(k) holders let ourselves be charged high fees that we do not understand, we accept poor returns quarter after quarter, we never sue to enforce our rights, we never vote as shareholders and we never tell our investment managers how we think they ought to vote.
Kentucky pension bill illegal in at least 21 ways, Beshear tells lawmakers |Lexington Herald-Leader
In February, Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear told state lawmakers that a proposal to overhaul Kentucky’s ailing public pension systems contains “multiple legal violations.” In a six-page legal opinion, Beshear outlined 21 ways he believes proposed legislation violates the “inviolable contract” the state has made with teachers and employees of state and local governments. “It is clear that if you pass [the bill] into law, you should expect numerous lawsuits, which the commonwealth will lose,” Beshear warned lawmakers.
Retirement experts to new government employees: Think for yourself |GoverningWhen politicians talk about pensions, it’s usually about the enormous weight they place on government budgets. According to the Volcker Alliance, state and local governments are on the hook for $1 trillion in unfunded pension liabilities. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle push for pension “reform,” a word often used in a positive sense, to rescue dollars that could instead be used for other services. But what about future retirees? Is pension reform positive for them? In many cases, not so much.
31 weird things about retiring you probably didn’t know | Nasdaq
It’s never too early to start thinking about how you want to spend your time — and your money — in retirement. No matter if you’re hoping to retire as early as possible or plan to work until you can’t, having a plan for how you want to spend your senior years helps make sure your dreams come true. Fortunately, there are some weird and interesting facts that could help you make the most out of retirement. Read and see how you can make retirement easy.
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