Holy crap that was a terrible idea. Ugh.
1/6/2009 6:18:23 PM
Id still rather have my private account and you would too, its just you might not realize it.Id rather have 50 cents on my dollar invested and 35 yrs to go, than the promise that ill get SOME money out of this insolvent system that may or may not be around in 35 yrs.. and if it is.. im sure some politician will means test me out.[Edited on January 6, 2009 at 6:26 PM. Reason : .]
1/6/2009 6:21:28 PM
This thread is stupid.I'd much rather invest in a private retirement account than pay into the insolvent transfer system known as Social Security, which likely will be severely scaled back by the time we retire. As for Italians who shifted all of their savings into private funds right before the global economy tanked? Well, they made a choice and screwed up, partially due to forces out of their control. The onus is on the account-holder to understand the risks involved in investment. I, for one, accept those risks and welcome the freedom to choose where my retirement money goes.[Edited on January 6, 2009 at 7:04 PM. Reason : 2]
1/6/2009 7:03:50 PM
I don't care that he won the Nobel, Krugman is a weasel.
1/6/2009 7:40:54 PM
^ as is anyone who doesnt toe your party line.
1/6/2009 8:13:04 PM
I missed the proposal that all private acccounts would contain a 100% weighting in equities, of which is to be bought within a year of retirement.
1/6/2009 8:28:11 PM
Anyone from our generation thinking SS is retirement plan is pretty laffo. That money is gone.
1/6/2009 8:32:19 PM
The above arguments for privatization revolve around the fact that privatization would more than likely be beneficial for 20-something college graduates.I mean, screw everyone else, rite?
1/6/2009 9:09:51 PM
SS (and the finances of our government in general) -- just a big Ponzi scheme.
1/6/2009 9:20:38 PM
^^ And your arguments revolve around the fact that privatization would more than likely be harmful to people to 60 something retirees.I mean, since it will hurt some people, we shouldn't do anything at all to change the system, rite?
1/6/2009 9:25:55 PM
No, it's centered around the fact that it'd be directly harmful to all people who aren't young and wealthy.And then in turn, to the economy as a whole, and thus indirectly harmful to people like us. Where would aggregate demand go if we didn't have some sort of government-backed safety net behind us in times like these?[Edited on January 6, 2009 at 9:30 PM. Reason : ]
1/6/2009 9:29:55 PM
why did those Italians put all of their money in one spot? diversification is a basic rule. thats their bad. let me handle my own retirement mr. guberment man kkthxu
1/6/2009 9:36:06 PM
Never thought I'd see somebody our age be in favor in Social Security.
1/6/2009 9:40:51 PM
1/6/2009 9:46:31 PM
1/6/2009 9:52:31 PM
Expensive things are bad. Always. No exceptions.
1/6/2009 9:56:09 PM
booneyou should split your assets among several things, one being the private market.another would be bondsstill another would real estate go see Dr. Huggard.
1/6/2009 9:58:54 PM
^ good point. That way you can lose 50% of part of your money, 40% of some of your money, and only 30% of the rest of your money!
1/6/2009 10:02:18 PM
1/6/2009 10:07:04 PM
speak for yourself. its a wonder how any of us do anything anymore without the government. maybe they should make our grocery lists for us too, so we dont eat anything unhealthy we americans shouldnt be trusted to take care of ourselves. besides even if I do squander my retirement, at least I wouldve lost it myself, taking the risks on my own research instead of some mindless politician.
1/6/2009 10:09:06 PM
1/6/2009 10:12:21 PM
^ yes, sounds great for a 30 year old with a nice job, 35 years from retirement. What do you suggest for 45, 50, 60, 70 year olds to do? Just stuff it all in a mattress?
1/6/2009 10:15:08 PM
"What's good for wealthy 20-somethings is good for America!"Pretty near-sighted/dumb, if you ask me.(and holy crap, could you imagine what would happen to the rental market in a deep recession without government economic safety-nets?)
1/6/2009 10:15:50 PM
1/6/2009 10:18:12 PM
1/6/2009 10:20:31 PM
1/6/2009 10:21:40 PM
my 3% ING savings account is pretty safe.
1/6/2009 10:23:38 PM
1/6/2009 10:26:18 PM
1/6/2009 10:27:43 PM
get outta here wit ur dayum logic and thinkin!
1/6/2009 10:27:57 PM
1/6/2009 10:29:07 PM
yeah, and you don't understand that sometimes what is good for society is good for all of us
1/6/2009 10:33:46 PM
1/6/2009 10:34:21 PM
1/6/2009 10:38:32 PM
^ From my post above...
1/6/2009 10:40:12 PM
1/6/2009 10:53:48 PM
1/6/2009 10:55:25 PM
20-something college graduates are so hilarious."Screw everyone else but me. Life is a zero sum game. If you're not making $75k+/year, you're lazy and stupid, and in a just world, your family would starve." How did I make it through NCSU yet somehow miss becoming so enlightened? Maybe it was the couple of years I spent at App?
1/6/2009 10:59:40 PM
You act like it is an either / or proposition.I accept the current reality of Social Security. I would still prefer to have a choice in how I invest my money. Either way, the system is flawed and will collapse under its own weight if some painful changes aren't made to correct it.We've entered a period in our Nation's history where conservatives will have to learn that tax cuts don't solve everything and liberals will have to learn that there are some things we simply cannot afford.Of course, we're likely to plow on, ignorant of this realization, until we hit a real financial crisis . . . like a truly free-falling dollar.
1/6/2009 11:18:36 PM
^^So, we're entering a recession, meaning spending is down, employment is down, wages are down and in general money flow is down. All of which means tax receipts are down. In the mean time, the number of people retiring is going up and the demand on government programs is increasing. Since social security is a pay as you go system, (as are many other government programs) how do you propose that the increased demand be met as the supply dwindles?[Edited on January 6, 2009 at 11:19 PM. Reason : sdf ]
1/6/2009 11:19:08 PM
1/6/2009 11:26:17 PM
1. SS will have to be tweaked. We can start with ceasing payments to people who don't need it. Or just making it a flat payment that would cover a subsistence existence. I imagine that'd go a long way. 2. Even if we can't manage to balance things out through the baby-boom retirement, I assume there's no set-in-stone law preventing us from covering any SS deficits with general funds. There was certainly nothing stopping the money from going in the opposite direction all these years. Oh noes! Debt. We can't have that.
1/6/2009 11:29:50 PM
In other words, as the economy falls, SS, like any other system falls with it. Stop paying people (kind of like what happens when your 401k bottoms out), cut benefits to a minimal subsistence living (kind of like what happens when your retirement funds fall with the market) or just put ourselves into massive debt to support our retirement in hopes that the economy gets better.So tell me again how SS is better than a private retirement account?Incidentally, when they hike the SS taxes and cut the benefits, do you think that will help or hinder economic recovery?[Edited on January 6, 2009 at 11:54 PM. Reason : adf]
1/6/2009 11:53:09 PM
I would immediately agree to accept no money from SS if I could stop paying SS tax. Of course, they can't do this because rather than invest the money that they took out of current retirees paychecks (or even stuff that money into a sack and let it sit somewhere) they spent it on other bullshit and they are paying those guys with the money they are currently taking from me. Very soon that system will reach critical mass, when the number of retirees substantially outweighs the number of workers they will have only 2 choices:1 - Receive less than you paid in, in which case you would have been better off burying that money in a hole.2 - Raise the rates on workers to such an exorbitant rate that the system gets voted out of existence.Anyone that doesn't have their head completely up their own ass realizes that SS is a broken system. I don't think I know anyone under 30 (hell, even under 40) who expects to see a dime of what they are currently paying as SS. For people like me and you SS is essentially government mandated robbery. At least with income tax we receive some sort of service, we will get nothing from SS.
1/7/2009 1:02:13 AM
1/7/2009 8:02:48 AM
Privatize Social Security how is this such a horrible idea....I hate to sound mean but anyone that is looking to retire in the next 5 years that was still stock heavy in their investment direction deserved to lose a bunch of money anyways...For anybody else this is a minor hiccup that will likely repair itself down the road. Even with the market tumble you will come out ahead over the likely 0% return on investment for many young people on their investment into the current social security system
1/7/2009 8:33:59 AM
but HUR we should sacrifice our money for the good of everyone else forever. you make no sense.
1/7/2009 8:37:27 AM
.[Edited on January 7, 2009 at 9:34 AM. Reason : asdfasd]
1/7/2009 8:43:36 AM
1/7/2009 8:49:25 AM
If people are living longer, then why can't people work longer? Raise the retirement age to 70+. Wouldn't that help a lot?
1/7/2009 9:30:11 AM