Dwindling Retirement Savings ‘Undiscussed Explosive Bomb’ Of Recession
OPS_admin | Jul 30, 2010 | Comments 0
After working in executive management for over ten years with a steadily increasing salary, Rick Stephens, 51, was laid off from his job in June 2008. Two years of steady unemployment later, he has sold his car, moved in with his 75-year-old father and blown through all his retirement savings to stay afloat.
“I pay my bills with what is left of the savings I accumulated by being frugal all my life, but I’m going through that pretty fast,” he said. “I have tapped my IRA, and the result of that is I will be heavily taxed on it next April. I honestly believe that there will be no recovery from this. If there is a recovery, it will be too late for me, as I will have exhausted my savings and my retirement that I had socked away by not living the high life.”
Stephens’ predicament is an increasingly common one. Aside from stagnant wages, soaring unemployment and plummeting home values, the major tragedy of this recession is the havoc it has wreaked on the retirement incomes of millions of Americans who have planned and saved their entire lives, only to watch that money drain out of their accounts much sooner than they anticipated.
Full Story: Dwindling Retirement Savings ‘Undiscussed Explosive Bomb’ Of Recession.
Filed Under: Economy - Labor



The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness.
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