Retirement Reconsidered
editorial

Retirement Reconsidered


The news that retirement accounts have lost $2 trillion in value in little more than a year was a sobering reminder of the severity of the ongoing financial crisis. Although the huge losses are on paper for now, they highlight the difficult choices for not only those hoping to soon retire, but for all expecting their retirement accounts to see them through their golden years.

Because of the stock market slide, retirement accounts — both pensions and the more prevalent 401(k)s — have lost 20 percent of their total value in the past 15 months.

As a result, workers have three basic choices, Congress’ top budget analyst told the House Committee on Education and Labor this week. They can spend less now, plan to spend less in retirement or they can delay retirement, said Peter Orszag.

This sobering advice is a stark contrast to President Bush’s advice to go shopping to boost the economy in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. It is also more realistic.

For the majority of Americans, a retirement account is their only savings — and even then it is outweighed by their debt. In 2005, the country’s collective savings rate dropped into negative territory for the first time since the Great Depression. Like the U.S. government, consumers are spending and borrowing more than they make.

According to the Federal Reserve, Americans owe more than $2.5 trillion in consumer debt, a nearly 25 percent increase in the last five years. The average amount of credit card debt is over $10,000 per household, a 25 percent increase since 2000.

Now, retirement savings accounts, many of which were too small to begin with, have shrunk dramatically. Both pensions, in which the employer is responsible for providing a set amount of money to retired employees, and 401(k) accounts, in which employees set aside a portion of their paycheck for retirement, often with a contribution from the employers, have been hit by the stock market drop.

Making up 401(k) losses — largely through hoping the market rebounds and investments regain value — falls to individual employees. Pension losses are often also borne by workers and, in the case of public employee pensions, also taxpayers. Because pension obligations must be met, companies may delay salary increases or reduce benefits or raise prices to do so. Cities and states may have to raise taxes or cut programs to meet pension obligations.

Mr. Orszag’s three choices boil down to a change in expectations. It is advice worth following even when the economy improves.

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1 comment on this item

If Americans would start to stop acting as though they have to keep up with their other neighbor...then things may straighten out, for one point to be made. We, as Americans, are inbred with the "rivalry" spirit. Naturally. When the guy down the street has this new Cadillac, then who is the next one to get one? His neighbor up the street. It never ends. Then, comes the motor home. Then the boat. Then the big grill. Then the siding. Then the this and then the that. Then, someone says..."I've 'outgrown' the neighborhood and moves into a home in another new development, then his neighbor, not to be outdone in any way, goes ahead, puts the old house up for sale and moves into a new development as well. Naturally, more debt is accumulated in this mind-thinking process. Rollovers in debts owed on automobiles and/or homes already owed on, and then the sale price of that auto/home does not exceed the debt already owed. It is accumulated into the new auto/home. And the banks allowed it. Open arms! So, retirement accounts are going up and down like Johnny on the pogo-stick! Pensions have crapped the bed! "Experts" keep their heads talking on TV all the time about it. Well...me? I did not get into this mess...and I escaped by not getting into 401k's, pension plans or anything in the US, or the companies or entitiies I worked for. I won't tell...but I'am not worrying one bit. You have to expand your vested interests and think "out of the box" if you are to survive...not in this USA, but the world as it is today. Please, if you are to survive through the retirement years, and with the "baby boomers" reaching retirement age already, certain programs as we know them to be may become bankrupt, and what can you rely on after that? It may be already too late for some.

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