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this post was submitted on 08 May 2024
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Good article overall, mainly it talks about 401k's benefit people who can afford to contribute, but also caused a reduction in traditional retirement opportunities.
It is certainly part of a larger problem that retirements have become extremely complicated, and the DIY aspect of it makes it confusing to most people. I do like her suggestion of a basically government run annuity, but that just seems like Social Security with extra steps. Might as well keep the traditional Social Security fund, get rid of the wealth cap, and provide an option to buy more credits for people who want a more extravagant retirement.
The virtue of the old employer-sponsored pensions is that they forced contributions. Letting people decide means that lower-income wages will fall so that people can't contribute.
Social Security wasn't ever meant to be enough; it was mean to be something minimal.
Social Security is forced contributions from employers and employees. It's the same thing, just on a national level. And the original intention doesn't matter. Social Security is changed all the time. Old people always need more money.
People like to claim this but no one ever attempts to prove it because it's right wing bullshit. It's one of the reason used to justify the reduced value of the payouts against inflation.
Look at what the payments were in say, 1950 — about 10% of the average yearly wage. That's not a retirement; that's a little bit to keep you going.