Could all of this be a longing for home and parents and so the apparatchiks
create a situation that will make that happen?    Might we call that a
designed societal pathology?

 

REH 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
Sent: Saturday, January 22, 2011 9:42 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Saving for retirement?

 

In the following posting I ignore the possibility of investing the money
instead of just putting it aside as savings.  That could make a difference
though at $10 or $100 probably not enough to make a real difference.

 

Ed

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Ed Weick <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: [email protected] 

Cc: [email protected] 

Sent: Saturday, January 22, 2011 9:19 AM

Subject: [Futurework] Saving for retirement?

 

Pensions have had a lot of exposure in the media recently.  On last night's
CBC news economist Amanda Lang and another lady, an expert on pensions, were
sitting at a table in a shopping mall advising anyone who cared to ask what
they should do to provide for their retirement.  It was a bit ironic because
many of the people in the mall probably had nothing to retire from - like a
job.

 

What Lang and the pension guru told people was something like "Put away a
fixed amount every month, even if it's only ten dollars, and let it build
up."  Hmm.... $10 a month is only $120 a year and only $3,600 in thirty
years in current terms.  Is that enough to retire on?  Hardly.  And even if
one were putting away $100 a month, or $36,000 in thirty years, would that
be enough?  Probably only if one died in the thirty-first year.

 

The pension problem got me thinking about an article in yesterday's Globe
and Mail.  It was called "Full House" and was about an increasing trend of
multi-generational families living together.  Its subtext said it all: "Kids
in the basement, grandparents upstairs or in laneway homes out back..."  I
guess that would be OK if everybody in the family got along, but most
families aren't like that.  What if my mother-in-law moved in?  Where would
I go?  Probably way down the basement behind the furnace. 

 

And besides, would there be enough earnings or pensions in the house to
permit the family to make a go of it?  One would hope so, but given current
and probably continuing uncertainties in the job market, its an open
question.

 

Ed

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