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The Case Against Retirement Ah, retirement! Before the 1
The Case Against Retirement Ah, retirement! Before the 1
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2024-05-03
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The Case Against Retirement
Ah, retirement! Before the 1950s, it was something only the wealthy could afford to do. Everyone else needed an income, and most folks struggled to get by in the industrial economy as their faculties deteriorated. Back in the days before, older people faced the kind of pressures portrayed by filmmaker D. W. Griffith in his melodramatic 1911 silent film What Shall We Do With Our Old’? It’s a sad tale of the setbacks endured by an elderly couple, the wife ailing (生病的), the husband tossed off the assembly line to make way for a younger worker.
Griffith was one of many social activists calling for a social insurance system to provide an income for the elderly. The social reformist dream became reality with the 1935 Social Security Act, the spread of the corporate defined benefit pension plan and Medicare Act in 1965. For most workers the last stage of life became a time of leisure, recreation, and enjoyment.
A Long Time Coming
Surveys show that a majority of baby boomers say they want to work during their golden years. They’re going to get their wish. The key question is no longer "How early can I retire?" It’s "Why retire?"
Of courser like all social and economic shifts, the trend isn’t new. It has been building for the past three decades with the move away from traditional pensions with their involuntary contributions. We’re also living longer. That’s good news, but it does mean that to maintain their standard of living the elderly have to either earn a paycheck longer or save more—a lot more.
For workers nearing their retirement years, the median balance was a mere $78 000 in 2007. And the stock market reached its all-time peak that year! But the Great Recession has devastated (严重破坏)portfolios since then, a stark (严峻的)reminder to millions of near-retirees that they haven’t saved enough to fund a good retirement. Indeed, taking into account both the decline in financial assets and housing, the National Retirement Risk Index signals that 51 percent of households are at risk at age 65 of not having enough retirement income to maintain their pre-retirement standard of living.
When You’re Sixty-four
Those are hardly heartening percentages, and the situation seems even worse when the US unemployment rate is at 10.2 percent, according to the Labor Dept. ’s October survey.
But a look at longer-term trends is encouraging. An aging workforce is living longer and is less disabled than previous generations. After all, average life expectancy in 1935 when Social Security became law was 61 years. It’s now 78. An adjustment might have to be made to the famous Beatles song "When I’m Sixty-four".
Older workers probably won’t be "digging the weeds" to mine the Beatles vein one last time. An economy dominated by services, information industries and knowledge businesses is far easier to labor in than one where the commanding heights are full of factories, mines and farms. The prospect of longer employment suggests more people will choose to alternate the rhythm of their lives, sometimes working intensely and at others exploring other opportunities.
Nevertheless, it’s a social and economic revolution. Take those surveys that show a majority of boomers expect to earn a paycheck in retirement. Only about a third in the past actually worked for paying following retirement.
The pressure to accommodate older workers will be there, much as the demand for old age insurance was growing around the time D. W. Griffith made his movie. The reason is that the financial impact of working even a few years longer on the average older worker is dramatic.
A paycheck has a greater effect on living standards than increasing retirement contributions from 15 percent of paycheck to 25 percent, for example. Your savings continue to compound, and your Social Security benefit grows. The same dynamic holds with working part-time. "You don’t have to pay for expenses out of savings," says Christine Fahlund, a senior financial planner at T. Rowe Price. "You meet them with your paycheck."
Work Longer, Stay Healthier
Take this illustration from the number-crunchers (会计)at T. Rowe Price. A worker earns $ 100 000 a year. He has a portfolio worth $ 500 000. His asset allocation is 40 percent stocks, 40 percent bonds and 20 percent cash. Instead of retiring, he continues to work and socks away 15 percent of his income for three more years. At age 65 he would have boosted his total retirement benefit package by 28 percent. If he went to age 70 his retirement finances would almost double in value, rising 90 percent. Of course, he doesn’t have to work full-time to get a return from waiting. An income of $ 20 000 from part-time work is the equivalent of withdrawing 4 percent a year from a $ 500 000 portfolio.
It’s also surprising that laboring for a paycheck may actually make aging workers much healthier than ever before. More than making ends meet, work is physically and mentally energizing for many people. Work is a social environment, with birthday celebrations and coffee Matches (聚会), friends and acquaintances, people to swap gossip and stories with, neighbors to commiserate (同情)with over divorce and to congratulate on pregnancy. It’s likely that you’ll want to move on to a different employer or paid activity when you’re older. But that doesn’t mean you won’t want to work. "For most people work is a community," says Meir Statman, finance professor at Santa Clara University.
For workers burning the midnight oil in a tough economy, this may all seems like the social equivalent of happy talk. They’re bone tired from working. Health problems are wearing them down. And, as the social commentator H. L. Mencken noted back in 1922, the job they are taking matters.
If he got no reward whatever, the artist would go on working just the same; his actual reward, in fact, is often so little that he almost starves. But suppose a garment (服装)worker got nothing for his labor: Would he go on working just the same? Can one imagine his submitting voluntarily to hardship and sore want that he might express his soul in 200 more pairs of ladies’ pants? [br] What kind of social phenomenon was described in the silent film What Shall We Do With Our Old?
选项
A、Younger workers faced serious unemployment situation.
B、The elderly people were suffering from great pressures.
C、The elderly people retired at an earlier age.
D、The old wife and husband lived a happy life.
答案
B
解析
细节辨认题。第一段倒数第二句指出,当时的老年人面临着无声电影《年迈时我们该做什么?》中描写的种种压力。最后一句具体介绍了当时老年人的悲惨生活。由此可知,该部电影记录的社会现象是老年人面临着各种巨大的压力,故答案为B)。
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