This is why its good to have a thriving economy.
Disappearing Middle Class: Bilingual Ph.D. Accepts Rent Money From Church
Disappearing Middle Class: Bilingual Ph.D. Accepts Rent Money From Church
This is why its good to have a thriving economy.
Disappearing Middle Class: Bilingual Ph.D. Accepts Rent Money From Church
Read this and let me know if you are as pissed as I am...all this for the guys that drove the market to the brink of depression.
Pay czar: 17 bailed-out banks overpaid bonuses - Business - U.S. business - msnbc.com
Garry
Read this and let me know if you are as pissed as I am...all this for the guys that drove the market to the brink of depression.
Pay czar: 17 bailed-out banks overpaid bonuses - Business - U.S. business - msnbc.com
Garry
Stories like the one above don't paint the whole picture. It is not the economy's fault she can't find a job; I bet there is more the the story. Unfortunately she makes some bad decisions:
"She left her stable situation to take a chance on a new program she believed in, but the program folded due to budget cuts less than two years later in January 2009, right in the middle of the recession."
"Ortiz lives in Las Vegas, Nevada, where the unemployment rate is currently the highest in the country."
"...running through all $15,000 of her savings, exhausting all 99 weeks of unemployment benefits and eventually having to draw from Social Security and accept financial aid from her local church congregation to help pay the rent. Monday morning, on her 63rd birthday..."
She doesn't come across as too smart. Only 15K in savings at age 63, renting, giving up a career for a riskier job with no safety net, living in Vegas....sounds like she is a gambler to me.
By the way, I have a relative that just found a job on his third interview - everyone I know is employed - one recently got a raise.
Look at what the government has done with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. I don't think the government setting executive pay can ever work, there things always seems to end up politicized. (Hint, look at where the Fannie and Freddie execs that presided over the economic melt down came from and look at where they are today).
Having been on the comp committee at board level, the members there were first and foremost concerned about shareholder value as most were themselves shareholders. So I would caution lumping all public company comp in with the obscenities of Goldman, Merrill (or the NBA for that matter).
What needs to happen is greater shareholder outrage and action at the board level.
I think you would be surprised to find the high percentage of people in their 60s with considerably less than $15k saved for retirement.
In the past 10-15 years, average married youngsters (Grandchildren) have had to work at least two jobs to keep pace with housing inflation, cost of goods, etc. often relying on thier parents (the 60+ crowd) to assist them. In these days of instant gratification, it has been easy for them to dig themselves into a hole that good old Grandpa and Grandma have bailed them out of. So, it's not too surprising that upon reaching retirement age that there was only around $15K left!
The only way that I could retire somewhat comfortably was to work by ass off and eliminate ALL debt before I pulled the plug, and I consider myself very fortunate to be able to do so.