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Your Pension Will Be At The Center Of America's Next Financial Crisis
Zero Hedge ^ | 03/26/2017 | Jeff Reeves via The Hill

Posted on 03/26/2017 5:30:43 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

Authored by Jeff Reeves via The Hill

I’m not a fan of the “greed is good” mentality of Wall Street investment firms. But the next financial crisis that rocks America won’t be driven by bankers behaving badly. It will in fact be driven by pension funds that cannot pay out what they promised to retirees. According to one pension advocacy organization, nearly 1 million working and retired Americans are covered by pension plans at the risk of collapse.

The looming pension crisis is not limited by geography or economic focus. These including former public employees, such as members of South Carolina’s government pension plan, which covers roughly 550,000 people — one out of nine state residents — and is a staggering $24.1 billion in the red. These include former blue collar workers such as roughly 100,000 coal miners who face serious cuts in pension payments and health coverage thanks to a nearly $6 billion shortfall in the plan for the United Mine Workers of America. And when the bill comes due, we will all be in very big trouble.

It’s bad enough to consider the philosophical fallout here, with reneging on the promise of a pension and thus causing even more distrust of bankers and retirement planners. But I’m speaking about a cold, numbers-based perspective that causes a drag on many parts of the American economy. Consider the following.

Pensioners have no flexibility

According to a Bureau of Labor Statistics report from 2015, the average household income of someone older than age 75 is $34,097 and their average expenses exceed that slightly, at $34,382. It is not an exaggeration, then, to say that even a modest reduction in retirement income makes the typical budget of a 75-year-old unsustainable — even when the average budget is far from luxurious at current levels. This inflexibility is a hard financial reality of someone who is no longer able to work and is reliant on means other than labor to make ends meet.

Social Security is in a tight spot

So who will step up to support these former pensioners? Perhaps the government, via Social Security, except that program itself is in crisis and will see its trust fund go to zero just 17 years from now, in 2034, based on the current structure of the program. If millions of pensions go bust and retirees have no other savings to fall back on, it will be nigh impossible to cut benefits or reduce the drag on this program. But won’t a pension collapse mean we desperately need Social Security, even in an imperfect form, well beyond 2034?

Pensions

 

The guaranty is no solution

There is an organization, the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC), which is meant to insure pensions against failure. However, it was created in 1974 as part of a host of financial reforms and is far from a perfect solution, primarily because it is funded by premiums from defined-benefit plan sponsors and assets seized from former plan sponsors that have entered bankruptcy.

What happens when a handful of troubled pension funds turns into dozens or hundreds? Remember, the PBGC guarantees a certain amount that is decidedly lower than your full pension — as members of the Road Carriers 707 pension fund learned when the group “protected” their pensions by helping to pay benefits, which had been reduced from $1,313 per month to $570. That’s better than zero, but hardly encouraging.

This is not about helping Baby Boomers fund an annual cruise to the Caribbean. Older, low-income pensioners are not saving their money. Instead, they’re spending it on necessities such as food, housing, healthcare and transportation. That means every penny you reduce from their budget means a penny in spending that is removed from the U.S. economy.

Anyone who has taken Econ 101 knows about the “multiplier effect” where $1 in extra spending can produce a much larger amount of economic activity as that dollar circulates around businesses, consumers and banks … or in this case, how $1 less in spending causes a an equally powerful cascade of negative consequences.

By helping ward against a pension crisis, America will be protecting its economy for everyone — plain and simple. But that requires some tough decisions on all sides. For instance, the U.S. Treasury denied a cut to New York Teamsters’ pension plan that was proposed last year. But now the fund is on the brink of collapse, and its recipients are facing benefits that are in some cases one-third what they were 15 years ago.

Like Social Security, current workers can’t contribute enough to offset the big obligations owed to retirees. And as with the flagship entitlement program, it’s up to regulators and legislators to step in — even when it may not be easy — in order to keep the system from collapsing. Let’s hope they make both pension reform and Social Security reform a priority in the near future.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: financialcrisis; pensions; socialsecurity
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To: from occupied ga
If they were that irresponsible for their lives they deserve to suffer.

That's a little harsh, please rethink it. Lots of these seniors don't deserve to suffer. But yes, lots of them were stupid by cashing our their equity and having enormous debt with no savings. Stupid people can be broke and have difficulty getting by. Suffering is a whole different bag. I know people that got hit with illnesses that devastated their ability to hold onto money. In their 50s, then their nest egg is depleted by serious illness and lots of debt. And insurance doesn't cover what they're going through. I've given money to people I know in that situation, not as a loan because they'll never recover from debt. I'm lucky enough to have saved and prepared for my retirement, like you, and feel fortunate. We have serious health issues but excellent insurance that takes care of all the expenses. I feel bad for those who are sick and in debt.

21 posted on 03/26/2017 7:59:30 PM PDT by roadcat
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To: SeekAndFind

The answer is to import millions of illegals and give them SSI and state benefits that Americans either pay into by working for many years or cannot get.


22 posted on 03/26/2017 8:01:22 PM PDT by minnesota_bound
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To: Think free or die

THX


23 posted on 03/26/2017 8:35:15 PM PDT by umgud
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear; SeekAndFind

>
But the next financial crisis that rocks America won’t be driven by bankers behaving badly. It will in fact be driven by pension funds that cannot pay out what they promised to retirees.

This is part of “leadership behaving badly”. They have taken the money that they were suppose to safeguard and carefully invest and blown it.

If this was a company pension fund in a small company or a small union it would be easy to track down who had committed this betrayal of trust and punish them.

But in the world of Mega-corp, mega-union and mega-government their very size is their protection. How do you go after everybody?

Who is innocent and who is guilty?
>

Guilty? Easy, govt. PERIOD.

Only in govt is such conflict of interest “legal”. The $$ (stolen) was never *theirs* to ‘safeguard’, let alone ‘invest’. It is, as you say, a $$-laundering scheme.

No citizen, regardless of ‘promises’, is beholden to another for personal gain. We did away w/ slavery (officially) over 150yrs ago. The economic version we have today is no different, aside from the willful ignorance of the populace and blind-eye of govt (whom is supposed to defend/protect our Rights).


24 posted on 03/26/2017 8:43:23 PM PDT by i_robot73 ("A man chooses. A slave obeys." - Andrew Ryan)
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To: roadcat; from occupied ga

>>If they were that irresponsible for their lives they deserve to suffer.
>
That’s a little harsh, please rethink it. Lots of these seniors don’t deserve to suffer. But yes, lots of them were stupid by cashing our their equity and having enormous debt with no savings. Stupid people can be broke and have difficulty getting by. Suffering is a whole different bag. I know people that got hit with illnesses that devastated their ability to hold onto money. In their 50s, then their nest egg is depleted by serious illness and lots of debt. And insurance doesn’t cover what they’re going through. I’ve given money to people I know in that situation, not as a loan because they’ll never recover from debt. I’m lucky enough to have saved and prepared for my retirement, like you, and feel fortunate. We have serious health issues but excellent insurance that takes care of all the expenses. I feel bad for those who are sick and in debt.
>

But the younger generations should be enslaved to the older because the older feels entitled to the promises and illegality??

Great about your CHARITY; and that’s exactly what they should be relying upon in those situations (family, church, community). Not the heavy\lethal arm of GOVT to rob others.

Once the retirement shift REALLY kicks in, I’ll be happy to see the youngins’ fighting for their emancipation from SS\etc. It’s not going to be clean/quick.


25 posted on 03/26/2017 8:48:57 PM PDT by i_robot73 ("A man chooses. A slave obeys." - Andrew Ryan)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
...They have taken the money that they were suppose to safeguard and carefully invest and blown it.

If this was a company pension fund in a small company or a small union it would be easy to track down who had committed this betrayal of trust and punish them...

Why is it that I knew about this problem 40 years ago, saved my own money and prepared for retirement and others didn't even know it was coming?

You realize that every single baby boomer retiring now or soon was alive 40 years ago. The magazine articles (remember them? printed on paper they were) I read way back then showed the fallacy of SS and most retirement plans. I looked on SS exactly the same way the Supreme Court did -- it is a tax, not a promise to pay a certain benefit. DW and I saved, invested, and then saved and invested some more.

Today we may be some of the few boomers who are OK. Now, losing SS would not be any fun, but it would not kill us either.

This is not an unforeseen problem, it is a problem brought on by believing politicians. Maybe the guilty are those who believed the lies.

26 posted on 03/26/2017 9:18:18 PM PDT by CurlyDave
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To: 2banana
It is basically money laundering of taxpayer money.
I don't think that's quite right. To launder money, you first have to have the money. The public pensions don't have the money to launder. The politicians made promises that wouldn't have to be fulfilled until well after their political career was over, and they didn't bother to set the requisite money aside. Public pensions are more like sinecures ... money for nothing, compliments of working, taxpaying suckers.
27 posted on 03/26/2017 10:16:59 PM PDT by Skepolitic
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To: PAR35

You pretty much nailed it. So many of these pension plans were raided, not funded, borrowed against and managed by people that probably couldn’t run a lemonade stand. How many municipalities elect people, who in turn give jobs to their buddies, who have no clue. Not to say that the scumbags on Wall St are any better, but, those guys have a vested interest in the funds performing. Some clown in the mayors office, gets paid either way.


28 posted on 03/26/2017 10:44:30 PM PDT by qaz123
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To: CurlyDave
" Why is it that I knew about this problem 40 years ago, saved my own money and prepared for retirement and others didn't even know it was coming?

You realize that every single baby boomer retiring now or soon was alive 40 years ago. The magazine articles (remember them? printed on paper they were) I read way back then showed the fallacy of SS and most retirement plans. I looked on SS exactly the same way the Supreme Court did -- it is a tax, not a promise to pay a certain benefit. DW and I saved, invested, and then saved and invested some more.

Today we may be some of the few boomers who are OK. Now, losing SS would not be any fun, but it would not kill us either. "

You said it better than I could. We've always assumed that SS would be broke and unavailable to us by retirement. We've saved and invested through all the ups and downs of repeated job losses. We've both had to re-make ourselves in the job market, seek additional qualifications, and take lower-paying positions to keep an income stream. Throughout all this we've managed to save, raise two kids, and put them through college without debt. We're approaching retirement age, and although we'd hate to do without SS, we should be able to manage as long as the idiots in DC don't find a way to confiscate our savings. I expect they'll try.

We've seen a lot of our peers take expensive vacations while we shared a place with friends, went camping, or visited family. They bought expensive new cars while we bought used, ran them until they died, and hubby did all the repairs. We've lived in an older home which he also repairs. He taught our sons how to fix things. It used to be the American way, and for some of us it still is. Self reliance. Hard to achieve when they're taxing and regulating it all so heavily but not impossible either. We worry for our kids, but we also know that we've given them the best start we could, and we have their backs as they get started on their adult lives.

29 posted on 03/27/2017 3:16:31 AM PDT by Think free or die
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