idhawkman wrote:Just curious Asea, how much money would you be able to earn on your own money over 5 or 6 decades based on the rates and their increase history? I bet you dollars to donuts you would be able to retire comfortably with your investments that would continue earning money for you way before 65 years of age and live only on the interest or earnings of the capital.
Over the course of your life, an immense amount. That is if I had learned to invest when young, which the education system did not teach when I was in school. I doubt we could trust people to invest their money intelligently. We would have so many people investing poorly that our poor class would increase. Certain people could opt out of social security, but others maybe not. I've taken a bath in the market before. The tech crash back in 2001 crushed me. I almost avoided it. I was out of the market the first month. The market kept on rising and I felt I was missing out on returns. Once I was crushed, I became obsessed with earning it back. I invested in DSL stocks. You probably know what happened next. Even using quality research, market information changed so quickly that the market crushed my finances. We're talking losses in the 90 plus percent. It was nasty. I did learn my lesson. I am a lot more careful now. The returns are slower, but the money is safe.
As much as I push investing, social security is something the nation needs for no other reason than the number of folks not capable of investing in a careful and consistent manner. I don't know how many could recover from the losses I took.
The biggest problem in the world is the scale of it. We have 350 million folks trying to survive. Different education levels, intelligence, interests, and capabilities. Social security is a nice even sum to provide a floor for survival of the old. I in no way want to advocate for being cruel to the old. My current problem is that social security was primarily built to help people survive the years they can't work and I mean can't. It was not meant as a retirement fund for people to spend 15 or 20 years traveling and doing whatever. If they want to do that, then they should spend more of their money doing that, not expect it to derive from taxes.
The rise in tax rates to pay for all the medicare and social security come from the conflict of expensive, advanced medical technology, longer lifespans, and a large population working within n archaic system meant to support old folks that usually passed away within 5 to 10 years of retirement using walkers and lower cost medical tech. This doesn't mix well and will require substantial change. How do we fix it without being cruel? Not sure, but I know it will be costly. Much higher costs than we have now. And this attempt to put everyone on medicare/medicaid regardless of if they are working or not seems like a recipe for disaster.
I think if they want this system to maintain, they will have to take the slightly less cruel stance of ensuring people work longer basing Social Security age on life expectancy. If you want to retire early, fund it on your own. If not, you work until you're fairly near death. It hasn't helped that the cultural paradigm has changed from families caring for their old to the old being alone. For all the negative talk of immigrants, it's pretty rare I see them treating their parents like American born and raised families treat each other. We need some of that back. It would ease the burden on the system if families picked up some of the cost of caring for the old in their family.
What percentage of folks do you think could intelligently manage their finances over the course of a life? Do we have teach the skills to do so in school right now? Does our culture encourage savings? I'm of the mind to answer to those questions is no. Until we change some of them, social security is necessary not to have a highly impoverished group of seniors. I don't know that that is something anyone wants.
The common American experience in education and culture does not teach you to invest. I learned nearly all I know about investing on my own. The information is out there, but it is definitely not taught in the standard paths of education. The usual path for someone that is at least putting effort into planning retirement is the one
Riverdog took using his company's retirement options. Options of a similar quality to what he had is rare nowadays. Most companies seem to be offering plans that base retirement on the market in the form of mutual funds or the like. A quality retirement program seems to be a thing of the past. Hopefully we will see a new paradigm shift for retirement planning that leads to an improved system as the old methods are not there any longer, especially given that staying with the same company until retirement seems to be a thing of the past.