Baby Boomers Are the Walking Dead; Half With No Retirement Savings At All

You young folks are just going to have to kick in more to Social Security so I can have my margarita on the beach.
 

Alternatively, you could thank all the doomsayers in 2007-2009 who convinced many of those baby boomers to take their money out of the markets after they lost money in the crash. I know several boomers who would be in great financial standings if they'd left their money in, but find themselves destitute because they shifted their investments to bonds, gold, silver, etc. at the worst possible time.
 
WTF, is this the flat earthed thread, or what?

Everyone on the planet may thank the boomers for being the most productive group ever to reside on this rock.

Longest work week, shortest vacation, least sick leave, fewest sick days and out-produced the nearest industrialized group by 3:1, while inventing everything from the internet to golfing on the moon.

Youngsters never tire of writing articles abut the average person from any group because they are the definition of average. What savings 25% of boomers, the percentage of boomers said to have no savings, have is irrelevant against the plain truth facts of the matter:

Boomers earn 1/2 of total income.

They represent 40% of consumer demand, the largest consumer group.

Their net worth is 70% of all net worth, so if they're broke, as the myth goes, then imagine where everyone else is financially.

Even though we took a 30% bloodbath in '08, boomers will transfer $30 TRILLION to the next generation... you're welcome, you whining brats.

My advice to the young is that I would, as I did when I was young, stop worrying about bullshit and save for my own future.
 
WTF, is this the flat earthed thread, or what?

Everyone on the planet may thank the boomers for being the most productive group ever to reside on this rock.

Longest work week, shortest vacation, least sick leave, fewest sick days and out-produced the nearest industrialized group by 3:1, while inventing everything from the internet to golfing on the moon.

Youngsters never tire of writing articles abut the average person from any group because they are the definition of average. What savings 25% of boomers, the percentage of boomers said to have no savings, have is irrelevant against the plain truth facts of the matter:

Boomers earn 1/2 of total income.

They represent 40% of consumer demand, the largest consumer group.

Their net worth is 70% of all net worth, so if they're broke, as the myth goes, then imagine where everyone else is financially.

Even though we took a 30% bloodbath in '08, boomers will transfer $30 TRILLION to the next generation... you're welcome, you whining brats.

My advice to the young is that I would, as I did when I was young, stop worrying about bullshit and save for my own future.

Hehehehe. The old folks are always barking at the young about how messed up they are compared to kids "in their day". And the young folks are always sneering at the old folks and crowing about how much better they will be at running the world. And nothing really changes.
 
WTF, is this the flat earthed thread, or what?

Everyone on the planet may thank the boomers for being the most productive group ever to reside on this rock.

Longest work week, shortest vacation, least sick leave, fewest sick days and out-produced the nearest industrialized group by 3:1, while inventing everything from the internet to golfing on the moon.

Youngsters never tire of writing articles abut the average person from any group because they are the definition of average. What savings 25% of boomers, the percentage of boomers said to have no savings, have is irrelevant against the plain truth facts of the matter:

Boomers earn 1/2 of total income.

They represent 40% of consumer demand, the largest consumer group.

Their net worth is 70% of all net worth, so if they're broke, as the myth goes, then imagine where everyone else is financially.

Even though we took a 30% bloodbath in '08, boomers will transfer $30 TRILLION to the next generation... you're welcome, you whining brats.

My advice to the young is that I would, as I did when I was young, stop worrying about bullshit and save for my own future.

What was your pay when you were 40, adjusted for inflation? How much of it did you pay in taxes? Did your wife work?

How many of your working years were you legally mandated to spend close to 20% of your take-home pay on medical "insurance"?

How many of you and your buddies' kids are mentally retarded? Was it more than 1 in 68 - which is just the current "Autism" figures?

How many days a week did you log in from home late at night to take care of something for work?

How many times did you have to spend a month's gross pay on a lawyer to get out of a negligence charge because your kid walked around the block?

I think before you start passing your shoes around and telling people to walk in them, you might want to see what our shoes are like.

I'd also like to tell you that I get that your generation didn't know any better, but if there's one thing I've noticed about the majority of baby boomers, it's that they won't fucking listen when you try to tell them. All I get from FTF encounters on that score is exactly what you dished out here: Just do what I did and everything will be fine. Well everything isn't fine - it's pretty totally fucked. So I don't buy that, and I don't get why this isn't apparent to more of you.
 
Hehehehe. The old folks are always barking at the young about how messed up they are compared to kids "in their day". And the young folks are always sneering at the old folks and crowing about how much better they will be at running the world. And nothing really changes.

Wonder how many bitching Millennials benefitted from their boomer parents providing way more for them when they were growing up including in some cases college educations, than their parents ever had.
 
WTF, is this the flat earthed thread, or what?

Everyone on the planet may thank the boomers for being the most productive group ever to reside on this rock.

Longest work week, shortest vacation, least sick leave, fewest sick days and out-produced the nearest industrialized group by 3:1, while inventing everything from the internet to golfing on the moon.

Youngsters never tire of writing articles abut the average person from any group because they are the definition of average. What savings 25% of boomers, the percentage of boomers said to have no savings, have is irrelevant against the plain truth facts of the matter:

Boomers earn 1/2 of total income.

They represent 40% of consumer demand, the largest consumer group.

Their net worth is 70% of all net worth, so if they're broke, as the myth goes, then imagine where everyone else is financially.

Even though we took a 30% bloodbath in '08, boomers will transfer $30 TRILLION to the next generation... you're welcome, you whining brats.

My advice to the young is that I would, as I did when I was young, stop worrying about bullshit and save for my own future.

wow, stupidest thing I have read all day.

the boomers represent an entitlement mentality gone awry. they lived in the most financially successful, full employment era in the history of the world, and managed to rack up 17 trillion in debt anyway.

http://www.theatlantic.com/business...omy-the-case-against-the-baby-boomers/263291/
 
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Wonder how many bitching Millennials benefitted from their boomer parents providing way more for them when they were growing up including in some cases college educations, than their parents ever had.

It's not a net benefit. It just appears so when you don't consider everything else there is in life. BTW, many boomers' attempts to give everyone a college degree has put large swaths of milennials neck deep in debt with a pathetic job market and debased currency to pay for it all. The Millennials are the first generation ever to fare more poorly than their parents in many moons.

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/oct/12/middle-class-young-people-future-worse-parents

Study: 30-somethings worse off than their parents' generation for the first time since the Great Depression


  • Urban Institute study says younger generations don't build as much wealth
  • Average net worth of 30-somethings has decreased 21% since 1983, but for 74 and older, average net worth has increased 149%
  • Trend caused by stagnant wages, fewer jobs, shrinking home values and high loan burdens

Americans under 40 years old are worse off than their parents for the first time since the Great Depression.

Twenty and 30-somethings, also known as Generation Y and X, are the only age group in the country currently worse off than their parents three decades ago, according to a recent study by the Urban Institute titled 'Lost Generations? Wealth Building among Young Americans'.
Americans in their 30s have been hit particularly hard—their average net worth has decreased 21 per cent from what previous 30-somethings had in 1983, CBS reported.

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Stagnation: A recent study by the Urban Institute found that younger generations are no longer better off than their parents. The average net worth of 30-somthings today has decreased 21 per cent since those in 1983

The grim study, published by a Washington, D.C., think tank, noted that Americans' wealth has 'grown significantly' despite the poor state of the economy. In fact, the average household wealth doubled from 1983 to 2010 and incomes have increased—but this is not the case for younger generations.

'For many, the American dream of working hard, saving more, and becoming wealthier than one's
parents holds true,' the study's authors write. 'Unless you're under 40.'
Typically, as society gets wealthier, children get richer than their parents, the study notes.

For instance, the average net worth of Baby Boomers aged 56 to 64 increased 120 per cent from their counterparts in 1983. Americans over 74 have an average net worth 149 per cent more than the oldest citizens three decades ago.

article-2347497-1A7BF9EC000005DC-621_634x467.jpg

Line: Younger generations, shown at the bottom with turquoise and red lines, are not accumulating wealth over time like previous generations

This trend is no longer the case, partially because the Great Recession hit young homeowners in their 20s and 30s the hardest. But the study's authors say younger generations were in trouble even before the recession hit.

Stagnant wages, diminishing job opportunities and shrinking home values play an important role in younger American's harsh new reality. Lack of educational attainment higher than previous generations also factored in.

College debt stifles potential savings as well. Most jobs—even some with low hourly wages—require at least a four-year degree. Some 20 million Americans attend college each year and nearly 60 per cent borrow to pay for school, according to the nonprofit American Student Assistance.
All those loans amount to roughly $870 billion in outstanding student debt, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. A quarter of 30-somethings have outstanding loan debt, but only 7.4 per cent of borrowers older than 40 have outstanding debt.

Because of these burdens, younger Americans can't imagine saving and building up a nest egg like their parents.
Myya Beck, a 33-year-old from Wellfleet, Mass., laughed when CBS asked her if she had any savings.

'My glass is always half full. I'm still day by day trying to something more. What else is there?' Beck said.

Beck runs her own fitness studio and works nonstop, but continues to struggle. Her earnings go directly to bills, college loans, rent and a car payment.


article-2347497-1A7BF9E7000005DC-855_634x486.jpg

Changes: In the past, kids earned more than their parents as society became wealthier, but this is no longer the case

With a baby on the way, Beck is worried about her future. She owes over $15,000 in college loans.

'I mean, this is everything that I've ever wanted. I've always wanted to own my own business,' she said. 'I've wanted to be a mom and have a family most importantly, of my own, so I've gotten those things, but financially how do I do it?'

The study's authors suggest the government should pay more attention to the hardships of younger generations—or else.

'If current trends for younger generations are not reversed, within a few decades they may become more dependent than older Americans today, especially in retirement, upon safety net programs less capable of providing basic support,' the study concludes.

 
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Wonder how many bitching Millennials benefitted from their boomer parents providing way more for them when they were growing up including in some cases college educations, than their parents ever had.

As a group, the millennials suck. Tons of arrogance and entitlement with little accomplishment or reason to justify it.
 
It's not a net benefit. It just appears so when you don't consider everything else there is in life. BTW, many boomers' attempts to give everyone a college degree has put large swaths of milennials neck deep in debt with a pathetic job market and debased currency to pay for it all. The Millennials are the first generation ever to fare more poorly than their parents in many moons.

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/oct/12/middle-class-young-people-future-worse-parents

I was referring to kids whose parents paid for their education through saving in a college fund, not students who took out their own loans. Many parents my generation saved for their children's education.
 
I was referring to kids whose parents paid for their education through saving in a college fund, not students who took out their own loans. Many parents my generation saved for their children's education.

And how much did college cost during those days?
 
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