The retirement savings crisis: Why more Americans can’t afford to stop working

submitted a month ago by return2ozma

www.usatoday.com/story/money/2024/07/10/why-ame…

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13 Comments

Kyrgizion a month ago

You don't have to be American for this. I can't afford to save so we live paycheck to paycheck, and pensions here are nothing to write home about. That is, if there will still be any pensions when our generation hits retirement age. I'm not counting on it.

sunzu a month ago

As if the global owner class is colluding to fuck the international peasant class....

My ohh my, nobody saw this coming folks!

return2ozma [OP] a month ago

Which country are you in?

Kyrgizion a month ago

Flanders, Belgium

slazer2au a month ago

Because shit is expensive and pay is crap.

zcd a month ago

But the billionaires have consolidated more wealth, so we have that going for us \/s

Tolookah a month ago

It'll start trickling down soon, right?

Showroom7561 a month ago

What will the future look like in 10-20 years when people who can't retire, yet too old to really work, are replaced by AI and young people?

Are we prepared for millions of new homeless or a surge in suicides in those above 60?

And why are individuals still being allowed to hoard tens of billions of dollars?

otp a month ago

Are we prepared for [...] a surge in suicides in those above 60?

"That would make things so much easier" - evil governments and their supporters

lordnikon a month ago

i like your outlook that we will be alive and still have modern concepts in 10 to 20 years like retirement. Instead of living in caves and choking on Air while trying to not be take in by heat stroke.

infinitevalence a month ago

I am contributing, but I expect to work till I die, because I am assuming the market has not actually factored in climate change costs and all my investments will turn to nothing once it all crashes.

sunzu a month ago

Unless you have been loading up on SPY or VOO since 2008, you won't be able to retire. House is not a retirement plan, and bonds did not pay shit until recently.

How many people loaded up on SP500 index? How many got enough to retire? I would posit less than 25% of boomers and that down % goes down for each generations after.

pdxfed a month ago

https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/W/bo212888995.html

A book from a well known economist who calls out the deliberate actions that led to this place in the US, and that fixes are still plenty manageable...but they require political action.

Personally I think we're past the point of no return. While homelessness becomes a crime in the middle of a housing affordability crisis and while Republicans weaponize being able to afford housing against being able to vote, it will get even harder to change as eligible voters are kicked off rolls for not being able to afford REIT-set rents that go up with the greed of Wall Street.