¶ … Rampell, C.R. And Saltmarsh, M. (2009, September 2). A reluctance to retire means fewer openings. The New York Times.
From the earliest years of the program, Social Security has been a three-legged stool steadied by a precarious balance of retirement savings, social insurance, and transfer programs.
Economists have recognized for decades that the economic well-being of an aging American society has been undermined by a "perfect storm" brought about by the Industrial Revolution, urbanization, the reconfiguration of families from extended to nuclear, and a considerable increase in life expectancy. The social and demographic changes have eroded traditional strategies -- charity, labor, family, and assets -- that fostered economic security. An agrarian society linked labor to prosperity and generally ensured that families could subsist through their own efforts. In the move from farms and rural villages to cities and towns, people traded crops ruined by weather and pests for recessions and layoffs.
Retirement savings. To that perfect storm, deregulation of banking and financial services must now -- in retrospect -- be added. In essence, those workers who did follow the rules and saved for their retirement were broadsided by corporate greed. The move to privatize retirement savings did not carry sufficient "social insurance." Private...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now