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Businesses United States

'General Motors, Sears and Toys R Us: Layoffs Across America Highlight Our Shredding Financial Safety Net' (nbcnews.com) 554

New submitter Bruce Henry shares a story: Today's aging workforce faces an uncertain future. The announcement this week that General Motors will lay off 15 percent of its salaried workforce and shutter multiple plants in North America was a sobering reminder of how far the American worker has fallen. Unlike most large private sector corporations today, thousands of employees at GM still enjoy some union benefits. The company has reportedly set aside $2 billion for layoffs and buyouts. It's not much, but it's something -- many workers, if they are laid off en masse, will be far less lucky. Some older Americans are lucky enough to have been grandfathered into generous pension plans and others hope social security and personal savings will be enough to sustain themselves. But for millions of younger people, the outlook is bleaker -- an ever-diminishing social safety net, with retirement dependent almost entirely on how well they manage savings. Two-thirds of millennials have nothing saved for retirement.

The private sector pension as we once knew it is all but dead. Public sector pensions, meanwhile, are under attack at the state level. "Companies don't offer pensions anymore. Social security, when it was established, was meant to be one leg of a stool," says Gerald Friedman, an economist at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. "One leg would be the private pension through employment, a second leg personal savings, and a third leg social security. Social security is now the only source of income of a lot elderly have." What, if anything, are our politicians doing about this? Progressives rail against President Donald Trump, but real retirement security has not been a big enough part of the conversation on either side of the political spectrum. Millions of Americans are in danger of entering their final decades unable to afford ballooning medical bills and cost-of-living expenses. This is a huge problem, and one that liberals in particular should have capitalized on this election cycle.

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'General Motors, Sears and Toys R Us: Layoffs Across America Highlight Our Shredding Financial Safety Net'

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  • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @12:59PM (#57708668) Journal

    It can only be your responsibility to provide for your financial safety. It seems many people misunderstand that word: "responsibility". It does not mean blame; it means you can't count on someone else to fix it. Sometime in your life, likely more than once, something financially horrible (and possibly horrible in other ways) is going to happen to you. It probably won't be your fault, but it will be your responsibility to carry on.

    Shit's going to happen, so be as prepared as you can. For most of the time sine WWII, excepting the recent "great recession", six months expenses as savings would carry your through a layoff. Maintain medical insurance, and that amount will also see you through a medical catastrophe, or at least contain the debt to something manageable. Don't voluntarily take on debt and you've won half the battle.

    If your under 50, don't expect social security to be worth enough to matter. Sucks, but yelling about it won't pay for your retirement. The younger you are, the more you'll get advantage from a 401K or IRA. Especially if you're in your 20s: sticking money away in a broad-based stock index fund and ignoring it for 40 years has amazing leverage, and that young you should plan on no useful assistance of any kind.

    The lack of someone else providing you a safety net will suck. But you know that's how the world works, so plan accordingly, as best you can given your circumstances. You can't fix the overwhelming national debt ($178,000 per taxpayer!), but you can avoid carrying debt, and save what you can.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @01:31PM (#57709024) Homepage Journal

      In Communist Europe we do safety nets collectively. It's not perfect but it's a hell of a lot better than what the US has.

      Socialism FTW.

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        In America we made different choices. We can fight about which choice is better (Merica!), but they're not going to change for anyone's convenience. So, reality being what it is, savings are a good thing. Heck, the only world in which savings are a mistake is on where you expect social collapse, either anarchy or the government seizing all your savings. Plenty of Americans are stocking up ammo instead of investments, but history says that's overly pessimistic.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Savings are a good thing, but the majority of people can't save enough to pay for cancer treatment. More can afford to save up enough to cover periods of unemployment, but not all. And people at the bottom have far more to lose - if you are rich you probably won't lose your home, but if you are poor you may well do.

          Socialism is insurance. Cheaper insurance than any commercial policy.

        • In America, we linked unions to socialism, and we linked socialism to communism, we linked social security to socialism too, and so the whole thing became a political minefield. Safety nets became a bad thing as a consequence, everyone being told that if you can't make ends meet then you lacked personal responsibility (unless it's my grandma, she was just unlucky, but your grandma on the other hand is a burden on the system you commie).

          Americans however are indeed saving money. We have economists that don

  • It is an unstable system. Once upon a time you needed to fake sincerity. Then you got it made.

    Now you just need to sling mud and make it impossible to tell sincerity from hypocrisy.

    We are going back to Middle Ages and serfdom. Glad I will not live long enough to suffer in that era.

  • by Shotgun ( 30919 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @01:00PM (#57708678)

    FTA: with retirement dependent almost entirely on how well they manage savings. Two-thirds of millennials have nothing saved for retirement..... Social security, when it was established, was meant to be one leg of a stool," says Gerald Friedman, an economist at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. "One leg would be the private pension through employment, a second leg personal savings, and a third leg social security. Social security is now the only source of income of a lot elderly have."

    Everyone is completely bereft of personal responsibility? In the richest country in the history of the world, people can not be held responsible for their own future? They can be excused because they have to have the latest big-screen LED and Iphone? Fun fact: A high school student working less that 20 hours a week at minimum wage makes more than 90% of the rest of humanity.

    As someone who has not been responsible with 401k savings, I can attest that it is not the rest of the country that is responsible for my retirement, and I do not care to hand more power over to clueless politicians and bureaucrats, which they will just use to garner more power. History has clearly shown they will badly mishandle any money that are given. Thank you, but no. Keep your so-called social security. I'll worry about me and mine.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Most Americans don't earn enough to pay for food, housing, medical care, and save for retirement. Maybe we should pay our workforce better, then we could talk about personal responsibility.

      • Most Americans don't earn enough to pay for food, housing, medical care, and save for retirement. Maybe we should pay our workforce better, then we could talk about personal responsibility.

        No, most Americans earn more than enough for those things. They don't earn enough to eat out multiple times each week, live in a larger house than they can really afford, have the latest big screen TV, nice cars where they can barely afford the payment, the latest iPhone, and save for retirement.

        In other words, they need to learn how to delay gratification and live a lower lifestyle.

        I used to listen to Dave Ramsey for 20 minutes every day when I went to get my kids from school. The folks who called him wi

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Moof123 ( 1292134 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @01:22PM (#57708888)

      A colleague from Germany was visiting our office recently. He was quite perplexed as to why on a lunch walk we all were discussing the stock market. Basically everyone has to be both investor and worker here. Over there there is a reasonable pension system and people focus on their jobs.

      It is also clear from various lunch walks with well educated co-workers that steady investing is beyond the grasp of many otherwise smart and rational people. Some want to have "my guy" handle their stuff (cue Berny Madoff flashbacks), others have been on the sidelines waiting for prices to be "right" while insisting they are not timing the market (they are). It is saddening that this is where we expect most folks to draw their retirement from.

      So while I don't suggest there should not be a system with zero responsibility, the current system is akin tossing baby seals into a shark tank and wishing them the best. I would like to see an expansion of social security to help fill the gap that has widened into a chasm between what people need and what they have to retire at a reasonable age.

      • Why is steady investing beyond the grasp of smart and rational people?

        My friends often say I am too rational in all the things I do and decisions I make, but when I graduated from college 8 years ago I simply saw the benefit of cheap index funds and started funneling my money into my 401k, Roth IRA, and HSA, maxing them out every year. Now it's 8 years later and I am 30 and I have about 400K in my accounts.

        To me it couldn't have been simpler and I rarely look at or talk about the stock market.

        • 8 years ago was the beginning of this latest bull market. 8 years * 15,000 contributions per year does not make $400K otherwise.
          • But it's not about how much I have now. This is retirement savings that I can't really touch. It's about how much I'll have in another 32 years or so when I retire.

            It's about long term investing over a 40 year time period. Even I let you pick any 2 dates 40 years apart as a starting and ending date to be investing into retirement type accounts what's the worst that someone could have done if they maxed out their accounts for 40 years? Sure some date ranges would do worse than others, but if you pick any

    • Everyone is completely bereft of personal responsibility? In the richest country in the history of the world, people can not be held responsible for their own future? They can be excused because they have to have the latest big-screen LED and Iphone? Fun fact: A high school student working less that 20 hours a week at minimum wage makes more than 90% of the rest of humanity.

      Making wide sweeping assumptions about prolific consumer spending correlating with failure to save undermines your argument.

      Every generation in all times and all places has had conspicuous spenders. They do so in order to, among other things, get attention. That that sliver of the population is going to be in money trouble at the end of their life is both unsurprising and unimportant.

      The 20 year-old in the cafe with the fancy phone may well be more frugal than you, because that phone is a birthday gift fr

    • FTA: with retirement dependent almost entirely on how well they manage savings.

      The people who seem to have the happiest retirements never managed their savings. They just managed to work for the government until they retire. Double points if you are in the "life and safety" group like police and fire and retire at 55 with full everything.

    • Everyone is completely bereft of personal responsibility? In the richest country in the history of the world, people can not be held responsible for their own future? They can be excused because they have to have the latest big-screen LED and Iphone?

      How about because their wife got very sick, they needed to pay for child care for all their kids for years, and of course all the other many expenses involved in losing the other parent's help, plus they tried to actually be responsible and pay all the bills, including the medical bills?

      Asking for friend ...

    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      Anyone planning on relying on Social Security is an idiot. This includes my own mother, who spent her adult years as a real estate agent, and put nothing away. Now, she gets a monthly check for about $900, and since she recently had to go into a nursing home on Medicaid, they're taking 90% of that to pay her expenses since she can't afford the ~$40k/year it normally costs.

      There's no excuse for not maxing out what your company will match in your 401k unless you're living well below the poverty line. And,

      • by ahodgson ( 74077 )

        So she should have saved all her money and then paid it to the nursing home instead of enjoying it? I don't think this example is an argument for saving more.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @01:05PM (#57708722)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      You do realize that BLS doesn't utilize any homeless figures, and it does produce the U-6 figure you mentioned. What it does do is attempt to figure out who is no longer looking for work, so they set up a well published explanation of their methodology. So how is the US playing slight of hand?...or did you mean the media, who's doing the reporting of unemployment?

      To be fair from one year to the next, you need to compare apples to apples. BLS also supplies that information https://www.bls.gov/ [bls.gov] no "slight

  • This is a huge problem, and one that liberals in particular should have capitalized on this election cycle.

    Indeed, they should have capitalized on it. But we're talking about the party that lost the white house to the man who is arguably the least qualified politician since the dawn of our democracy. The democrats are practically synonymous with "pulling failure from the jaws of victory". Being as truth doesn't get votes any more, they ended up pretty much where we expected - they now control one half of one third of the government.

  • I wonder what Trump had to promise GM for them to delay the announcement until after the election?
    • I wonder what Trump had to promise GM for them to delay the announcement until after the election?

      What's hilarious about this is the fact that Obama actually bailed them out and threw a huge bone to the union in the process. But I guess since a Democrat did it it's cool.

      Just to make your head explode if it hasn't already, Donald Trump was on the record as being pro-gay-marriage. Obama ran on a platform against gay marriage.

  • Waive (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @01:38PM (#57709100) Journal

    You wanna help retirees? Waive the damned property taxes.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Virtucon ( 127420 )

      All taxes are the bain of humanity. States and local govt's have run amok in terms of establishing revenue sources to pay for pension benefits for retirees.

    • "You wanna help retirees? Waive the damned property taxes."

      Sounds good until all property is owned by "retirees" and schools are not funded. The money has to come from somewhere if you want schools, roads, military, police, etc.

  • by bistromath007 ( 1253428 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @01:55PM (#57709268)
    These systems were destroyed before Boomers started retiring. They cheered on that destruction because they were making enough money that they didn't need any of it. Now they can't retire because there's nothing under them as a direct result of their own actions. They'll doubtlessly find a way to blame their kids for it.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • It's worth taking some time out to do some thinking. At one time America was the best. Our people ruled the world, we made all our own products. They might have been more expensive than imported goods, but the trade-off that our own people were employed and could afford to purchase said goods was held to be more important. What happened that we decided that cost of goods suddenly took not just first place, but only place? Why did we destroy our own people for the promise of cheap goods from hostile countrie
    • Are you describing the post-WWII boom as if it was a steady state? We made the best things because we still had factories, now we're regressing to the mean.
  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @06:21PM (#57711404) Journal

    The conclusion that this problem is one "that liberals in particular should have capitalized on this election cycle" tells me all I need to know about the political views of the original poster.

    That said? Yeah, we have some looming problems for future retirees when it comes to finances. But the people who are already nearly 30 years old and "have nothing saved for retirement" still need to look in the mirror to find who to blame. I can guarantee you (because I work with a lot of these people myself), a lot of younger people were never taught much of anything about finances and investing. Many have no idea how to balance a checkbook, and rely on regularly logging in to their bank's web site to determine how much money they've got in their account(s). They couldn't challenge their bank about an error if they had to. They just blindly trust and accept that the bank is keeping a proper record of their transactions. They've been offered 401Ks but opted out, saying they "didn't trust that the money would really be there by the time they retire anyway" or other such excuses.

    The fact that many people are struggling to find and keep good paying jobs obviously doesn't help either. But the fact is, it's a lot easier to have money taken out of your paycheck, pre-tax, before you ever see it. The bellyaching about not being able to afford to let them take even 3% or 4% out for a retirement account is just FUD. If you're living SO close to the edge that 3% of your income, pre-tax, will make the difference between you surviving and not? You have bigger problems and need to re-evaluate your life choices and needs.

    Personally, as a libertarian who leans financially conservative on most issues? I think it's the liberal Democrats who I'm most afraid to see trying to "fix retirement problems". They're notorious for the persistent belief that any problem can be addressed by pointing the finger at someone else with more resources, and demanding they give some of theirs up towards the goal.

    When you look at how the existing Social Security system is set up? It's not even really a designated "pot" that funds go into. That's why so many other political plans involve dipping into money that was supposedly earmarked for people's retirement. Even SSI comes out of Social Security. That's a potential problem because disability payments are doled out to a lot of people who never worked long enough to contribute anything meaningful IN to the system first. And our legislation allows for practically anything imaginable to count as a disability, if you can get the right doctor to sign off on it. I once dated a girl, briefly, who was in her 20's and I discovered was collecting disability payments. I couldn't imagine why, until I found out she claimed she had "back problems" that prevented her from ever being able to hold a job. It turns out, it was some kind of issue where occasionally (maybe once a month at most?) she'd find she couldn't get up out of bed in the morning ... basically paralyzed for a while. A few hours later, it would get better and she could get up and move around again. A legitimate medical problem? Yeah, but IMO, hardly one that would keep you from being a productive member of society. Especially with all the teleworking opportunities around today, it's a better time than ever in history to find employment despite a limitation like that! A tenant in my father's apartment, a while back, was collecting disability payments because he claimed his previous cocaine addiction qualified him. You could even collect it for being too overweight, if you wanted to go that route .... How much more money would be there to ensure Social Security could pay people fairly in their retirement if it wasn't drained off by these other things?

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