Riding into the Sunset. William Greider.
by Greider, William; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2006Article 57Family. Publisher: Nation, 2005ISSN: 1522-3213;.Subject(s): Individual retirement accounts | Pensions | Retirees | Self-realization | Social securityDDC classification: 050 Summary: "In 1900 Americans on average lived for only 49 years and most working people died still on the job. For those who lived long enough, the average 'retirement' age was 85. By 1935, when Social Security was enacted, life expectancy had risen to 61 years. Now it is 77 years--nearly a generation more--and still rising....This inheritance from the last century--the great gift of longer life--surely represents one of the country's most meaningful accomplishments. Yet the achievement has been transformed into a monumental problem by contemporary politics and narrow-minded accounting....Painful solutions must be taken to avoid financial ruin. Or so we are told. A much happier conviction is expressed by Robert Fogel, a Nobel Prize-winning economist at the University of Chicago and a septuagenarian himself." (NATION) The author explores Fogel's views on the expanding longevity of the nation, which he sees not as "a financial burden but an enormous and underdeveloped asset."Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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REF SIRS 2006 Family Article 54 The Long Walk. | REF SIRS 2006 Family Article 55 50 and Fired. | REF SIRS 2006 Family Article 56 Midlife Crisis? Bring It On!. | REF SIRS 2006 Family Article 57 Riding into the Sunset. | REF SIRS 2006 Family Article 58 Assisted Living. | REF SIRS 2006 Family Article 59 As Americans Age, States Respond. | REF SIRS 2006 Family Article 59 Stolen 'Golden Years'. |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006.
Originally Published: Riding into the Sunset, June 27, 2005; pp. 13+.
"In 1900 Americans on average lived for only 49 years and most working people died still on the job. For those who lived long enough, the average 'retirement' age was 85. By 1935, when Social Security was enacted, life expectancy had risen to 61 years. Now it is 77 years--nearly a generation more--and still rising....This inheritance from the last century--the great gift of longer life--surely represents one of the country's most meaningful accomplishments. Yet the achievement has been transformed into a monumental problem by contemporary politics and narrow-minded accounting....Painful solutions must be taken to avoid financial ruin. Or so we are told. A much happier conviction is expressed by Robert Fogel, a Nobel Prize-winning economist at the University of Chicago and a septuagenarian himself." (NATION) The author explores Fogel's views on the expanding longevity of the nation, which he sees not as "a financial burden but an enormous and underdeveloped asset."
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