Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Perplexed at the Brink of Retirement

One of the things that concerns me as I baby boom my way to 60 and at some point retirement and that is the question if I can ever actually be able to retire.  I know that I am better off than many and not as well off as some.  I have written about the retirement of the very concept of retirement http://thissideoffifty.blogspot.com/2009/01/january-2006-retirement-of-pensions.html.

This very idea was covered in a recent article in the Huffington Post,  Retirement Crisis: Baby Boomers Near 65 With Retirements In Jeopardy.  The article is a bit of a scary read not only for our generation but the generations behind us that may end up with the debt of bolstering both social security and medicare to support us.    But the article should be read.  According to the article, we are retiring at the rate of 10,000 per day.  This will last over the next 19 years.  Also, according to the article, we are retiring too early and without sufficient savings.  The article re-hashes the litany of reasons for this from the disappearance of pensions, the economic downturn that wreaked havoc with the nest eggs of home value and 401Ks, the strained social security system, and healthcare.  Looking at the glass as half-full, it is not a pretty picture.

This is not what we signed up for when we came of age in the 1960s and 1970s.  We lived in a country where you put your time in and do your job and you sail off into the sunset enjoying your fully funded, often by your employer, retirement.  The companies we planned on working for would reward us for our 30 years by supporting us for another potentially thirty years.  Cool.  Let’s do it.  

Now, at the brink of retirement, I believe that what we were sold on and bought into in 1970-something is simply not all there for the large majority of us.

That ideal plan presupposed a constantly strong and growing economy with a labor force that was also growing and expanding.  It presupposed a wealth of good middle class factory jobs.  It was a plan that was built around the model of Detroit: The Motor City.  You work salary or hourly for a big company or supplier to a big company and everyone was happy.  Somewhere along the way, global competition came in and forced productivity and our companies that were essentially monopolies after WWII.   Things have changed quite a bit.

Most of us did not change enough with the times.  Sure, the wealthiest of us are OK.  But I am guessing the vast majority of us are standing here looking forward and not knowing when and if we can truly retire.  Even if we don the blue vest, we might not be able to truly have enough money to survive.  This will all be magnified tenfold by any serious health issues.

There is another dichotomy here for me as well.  In the spirit of this blog, we had other noble ideals when we were coming of age.  At least, I did.  I thought we would be doing something different than our parents and grandparents.  I thought we would have gone boldly forth and created wonderful alternative livelihoods and lived some kind of utopian hippie summer of love laid back perfect dream.  I know only one friend that actually became a farmer and he is still farmering today.

To a degree, I bought into the dream.  But upon earning a degree, I realized we could not all of us live off opening and running tie-dye t-shirt stores, head shops, quaint music and book stores, and communal farms.  The economies of scale were against us.  We compromised.  We sold out.  We rationalized it... I am still not sure how that happened which is one of the reasons I started this blog.  

The cold hard fact is that we graduated either from high school or college and then had to do something.  Despite all the best laid aspirations, most of us found ourselves working for corporations.  We got married, had 1.7 children, and an economic reality set in. Next thing you know and we are buying into the Reagan era boom and saving for our children’s college, weddings, and our own retirements.  Life was looking pretty rosy for most of us back in those days.

For many of us, though, there was no substantive saving.   Most of us were just getting by and making ends meet.  As employers gradually stopped providing the kinds of funded pensions that were largely in place when we entered the workforce, the burden fell on us to save.  For this to work, however, we had to have enough money to contribute to our 401k plans, the foresight to contribute to these plans, and the stock market had to play along by steadily growing.  For many of us, the first two simply did not happen.  For all of us, especially over the past few years, the stock market simply did not do what many of us were counting on it to do.  The timing of the Great Recession has been horrible for many of us planning for a retirement like our parents have or had.

What do you think about this?  Am I right?  Or just full of it?  What are your plans?  Are you set?  Or do you wish you had planned better.  If so motivated, comment on this piece.  Better yet, write your own story.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Talkin' 'bout My Generation

I just read an article from the News-Review of Douglas County, Oregon about the first wave of baby boomers turning 65.    http://www.nrtoday.com/article/20110213/NEWS/110219915/1063/NEWS&ParentProfile=1055.  It is purely circumstantial that I began this blog at this time.  Truly, I should have started it over a year ago if it were not for my world class procrastination skills.

Douglas County, Oregon?  Back in the day, living in Detroit, I would never be reading anything from that news paper unless it was reprinted in
The Detroit Free Press.  Today, it is not really a problem. Most certainly, I read this on line.   I was informed about this article on twitter from a tweet posted by @SeniorBiz whose mission is to provide “Senior News, Opportunities and Benefits for Better, More Enjoyable Living.”  The tweet included the phrase “Talkin' 'bout my generation” which got my attention and directed me to a newspaper I might never have ever read.  The title of the article is “Douglas County Baby Boomers: Talkin' 'bout my generation"  by DD Bixby.

By the way, Douglas County Oregon is along I-5 halfway between the Eugene and the California state line.  The closest I have been to there is San Francisco.

By the way number two, I admit that I learned of this from @SeniorBiz.  I am a follower of @SeniorBiz.  While I intellectually and mathematically comprehend that I am a senior from most definitions of the term including having got the invite to join AARP when first turning 55, I still do not feel all that senior.


The article in the News-Review centers on five residents of the county all about to turn 65:  Leslee Sherman, Bob Adams, Neil Hummel, John DeGroot of Glide and Dale Greenley.  I will not get into much of what they had to say for you can follow the link to the engaging article which is part one of two.  I will provide a few quotes however that are in the spirit of what this blog is intended to be.  


“Baby boomers are used to being examined and held up as the bellwether of American society.”  Not only are we examined, we spend a lot of time examining ourselves.  Partially, this blog is due in part, maybe entirely, to our self-absorption with ourselves.  Until we were born, I was often told that “children were seen and not heard.”  I do believe TV had a whole lot to do with this influencing who and what we are.
“The question today is how retiring baby boomers will affect the U.S. economy.”  This has been a great question.  I will point out however that in the past ten years for sure the questions has shifted.  I would re-phrase it now as:  How will changes in the US Economy, the loss of pensions and the curtailing of benefits affect the retiring baby boomers most of which do not have enough savings?


When Leslee Sherman was a teenager, her mother told her, “Oh, Leslee, every generation thinks they're the special generation.”  Indeed this is true.  But, at that coming to age time in our lives, we do feel special.  The world is opening up to us in different ways.  We are really beginning to experience love, flexing our Independence for real, exploring our careers, solidifying those vital few life long friends, and melding ourselves to the music, movies, and  fashions of that time.  We all, everyone, of every generation, feels the special bonds to their music.
  • What makes us think we are so much more special or unique than any other generation?
  • Are we the “way to full of ourselves” generation?
  • Is the soundtrack of our generation really that good? 
  • Have we made an impact or did the Military Industrial Complex win?
  • Can we still make a difference?  If so, how?
I kind of have given my answers to some these questions.  I want to hear from others.  I want to hear from you.  I want us all to be... talkin’ ‘bout our generation.

Write me at mgavoor@gmail.com if you would like to post your thoughts here.