Scary as hell: the looming economic disaster

  • Context: News 
  • Thread starter Thread starter gravenewworld
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Economic
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around concerns regarding the looming economic disaster, focusing on government spending, the national debt, and the implications of social security and retirement funding. Participants explore various perspectives on fiscal policy, the historical context of deficit spending, and personal financial strategies in light of these economic challenges.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants argue for cutting government spending, particularly programs established during the Hoover/Roosevelt administration, suggesting that such cuts are unlikely to happen.
  • There is a contention regarding the historical performance of Republican and Democratic administrations concerning the national deficit, with some asserting that Republican administrations have consistently increased the deficit while Democrats have decreased it.
  • One participant expresses skepticism about the sustainability of social security, suggesting it was never intended to be a permanent solution and questioning the public's attachment to it.
  • Another participant shares their reliance on social security for living expenses, highlighting the challenges of saving while working and the impact of inflation on retirement funds.
  • Some participants propose that investing in retirement accounts like 401(k)s or IRAs could provide better long-term financial security compared to social security.
  • There are discussions about the potential returns from the stock market compared to social security benefits, with some participants advocating for stock market investments as a more favorable option.
  • One participant presents a hypothetical scenario using a spreadsheet to illustrate potential investment growth over time, emphasizing the benefits of starting to invest early and taking advantage of tax-deferred accounts.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on government spending and social security, with no clear consensus on the best approach to address the economic concerns raised. Disagreements exist regarding the effectiveness of past administrations' fiscal policies and the viability of social security as a long-term solution.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference historical spending patterns and personal financial experiences, but there are unresolved assumptions regarding the future of social security and the reliability of stock market investments. The discussion includes varying perspectives on the implications of government fiscal policies and personal financial planning.

Physics news on Phys.org
Yup, time to cut the spending that had its roots in the Hoover/Roosevelt administration.

Chance that that will happen= closer to negative than positive.
 
aeroegnr said:
Yup, time to cut the spending that had its roots in the Hoover/Roosevelt administration.

Chance that that will happen= closer to negative than positive.

You could zero out all the welfare spending (I assume that's what you meant. Or was it Hoover Dam?) and we'd still be in the soup.
 
The 'debtdeficiteconomy' is the reason I am still keeping Kerry as an option right now.
 
Every Republican administration in the last 50 years has increased the deficit. Every Democratic administration has decreased it. Bush has caused the largest increase in debt in US history, second only to his daddy. I cannot even imagine that, if the economy is important to you at all, Bush is even a consideration.

- Warren
 
chroot said:
Every Republican administration in the last 50 years has increased the deficit. Every Democratic administration has decreased it.

I don't think this is entirely accurate. The deficit increased by about 20 or 25% under Carter. Damn him !
 
chroot said:
. I cannot even imagine that, if the economy is important to you at all, Bush is even a consideration.

- Warren

Well to help you imagine it, other things are a concern as well.
 
Okay, kill federal education funding, all subsidies, welfare, healthcare, medicare, social security, etc.

By then, I'll be happy, but that's too bad because I'd also be dead (no chance in hell short of revolution).
 
aeroegnr said:
Okay, kill federal education funding, all subsidies, welfare, healthcare, medicare, social security, etc.

By then, I'll be happy, but that's too bad because I'd also be dead (no chance in hell short of revolution).

You try a revolution on that platform and your neighbors will string you up.
 
  • #10
Given the current situation...probably
 
  • #11
chroot said:
Every Republican administration in the last 50 years has increased the deficit. Every Democratic administration has decreased it. Bush has caused the largest increase in debt in US history, second only to his daddy. I cannot even imagine that, if the economy is important to you at all, Bush is even a consideration.

- Warren
Even scarier is that that's peanuts compared to the debt the article is talking about. And I don't see a way out - people are just too attached to their handouts to rationally consider what it is doing to the economy.

I've resigned myself to the idea that I'll never see a cent of my social security - but I'll still pay into it my entire life. That'll be several hundred thousand dollars flushed straight down the toilet.
 
Last edited:
  • #12
Social Security should be done away with anyway. It was never meant to be permanent, it was only to help out during the Great Depression.
 
  • #13
gravenewworld said:
Social Security should be done away with anyway. It was never meant to be permanent, it was only to help out during the Great Depression.
Yeah, but people are so irrational about it - once you start handing out money, people won't let you stop (via their vote) even if you're taking money out of their pockets with your other hand.

I laugh at my friends every April when they get all excited about their tax refunds. With that kind of mindset (acting like having your money returned to you is the same as getting a gift) could doom us all.
 
Last edited:
  • #14
I get $1500 a month from social security, and that's what I live on. Oh, I should have saved while I was working? Yeah right! With what? One thing I did all through the years was plug in my FICA, check after check. And that, suitably deflated, is what's coming back to me. We'll seee what you guys think when you get old. Remember to do the calculation, 2.5% average inflation per year for 30 years.
 
  • #15
That's why it's important to establish a 401k, 401b or other independent retirement fund. Even a roth IRA. Once you get used to living without the little bit of extra money each check, you don't even miss it. That's assuming of course, that you're working already
 
  • #16
selfAdjoint said:
I get $1500 a month from social security, and that's what I live on. Oh, I should have saved while I was working? Yeah right! With what? One thing I did all through the years was plug in my FICA, check after check. And that, suitably deflated, is what's coming back to me. We'll seee what you guys think when you get old. Remember to do the calculation, 2.5% average inflation per year for 30 years.
You would have had PLENTY to save while working had you not been paying into the system.
 
  • #17
By paying into the system I was saving. The idea that I could have had more if I had invested it is a counterfactual; I could also have lost it all. I was also buying a house (a couple of houses at different times). I lucked out; both times when I sold the market was high and I got an excellent price. That money went to buy the place I now live in (in a deal with my daughter), so at least that part of my outgo is nulled, and you could say from saving.
 
  • #18
selfAdjoint said:
By paying into the system I was saving. The idea that I could have had more if I had invested it is a counterfactual; I could also have lost it all. I was also buying a house (a couple of houses at different times). I lucked out; both times when I sold the market was high and I got an excellent price. That money went to buy the place I now live in (in a deal with my daughter), so at least that part of my outgo is nulled, and you could say from saving.

Have you ever calculated how much you paid into the system in yoru life?
 
  • #19
selfAdjoint said:
I get $1500 a month from social security, and that's what I live on. Oh, I should have saved while I was working? Yeah right! With what?
If you hadn't paid that 7.8% of your income to Social Security, would you have saved it? How about a 401K? That's free money (in two ways - matched funds and tax-deferred investing).
The idea that I could have had more if I had invested it is a counterfactual; I could also have lost it all.
Only if you were really, really stupid (ie, greedy). The stock market is a far better investment than people realize.
 
  • #20
russ_watters said:
The stock market is a far better investment than people realize.

And even then, thereare plenty of other no risk investments that pay back higher than you will see from SS, and earlier if needed
 
  • #21
Here is a quickie little spreadsheet showing what the stock market can do for you without thinking about it, ie. if you simply put all of your investment money into a stable index fund (S&P is preferable).

My assumptions are that you start with an income of $24,000, get a 2%+inflation raise per year (you're a mediocre employee), invest 7.8% (the amount you put into SS), and the stock market rises at a constant 8% yearly rate (its historical inflation adjusted average), and you invest for 40 years (start investing at 30, retire at 70). Feel free to tweak them to fit you. The results in today's dollars:

Your lifetime (40 years) earnings are $1,43,319
Your lifetime investment input is $114,918
Your investment portfolio's end value is $697,491
This will provide 26 years of income at half your salary at retirement of $53,376 (assuming it doesn't continue to grow).

Now that's not great, but that's a doable retirement. But my assumptions were very conservative. Try a 10% yearly market increase instead of 8% (the past 50 years have been better than the overall average). Try a 5%+inflation yearly salary increase (or if you're ambitious and a good worker, try 7%). Try investing 10% instead of 7.8%. Try making the investments tax deferred (add ~40% to each payment into it). Try 50% (or if you work for a good company, 100%) matched funds for your 401K. Try adding the post-retirement investment growth. Try starting to invest at age 25 instead of 30. Try getting that other half of your SS tax (the part your employer pays) to invest.

Put even half of these improvements in the assumptions into the equation and, on a modest income, virtually anyone could retire truly wealthy if SS wasn't standing in the way.

BTW, SA, assuming you will make that $1500/mo for 30 years, that comes out to $540,000 - about $150,000 less than if you had invested that 7.8%. But wait - its even worse - your employer matched that 7.8% with 7.8% of its own!
 
  • #22
Index funds weren't available throughout most of my career, so it's moot. And your assumptions are wildly off. I started in 1964 at $8000 per year, got a raise to $11,000 in 1968 and $18,000 in 1973. These were excellent salaries for the time. I went to $30,000 in 1980, $40,000 in 1986, worked at a consultant for $35 an hour from 1990 to 1995, $55,000 from 1995, $65,000 from 1998, $72,000 in 2000, unemployed and drawing Social Security from 2001.
 
  • #23
I just wanted to also add that you have to take inflation into account. So 600K in today's dollars will only be worth a percentage of that in 30 or 40 years. 600K sounds great now, but in 30 years when it costs 20 bucks for a gallon of milk it won't buy nearly as much. If you're not staying ahead of inflaction and the value of the dollar, in addition to the 8-10 percent you're making on your investment, you won't be doing that great.
 
  • #24
Anybody thought about what would happen to the stockmarket if everybody would put his money on it?
 
  • #26
Mercator said:
Anybody thought about what would happen to the stockmarket if everybody would put his money on it?

Especially if the GOVERNMENT put everybody's money in it!
 
  • #27
selfAdjoint said:
Index funds weren't available throughout most of my career, so it's moot. And your assumptions are wildly off. I started in 1964 at $8000 per year, got a raise to $11,000 in 1968 and $18,000 in 1973. These were excellent salaries for the time. I went to $30,000 in 1980, $40,000 in 1986, worked at a consultant for $35 an hour from 1990 to 1995, $55,000 from 1995, $65,000 from 1998, $72,000 in 2000, unemployed and drawing Social Security from 2001.
Sorry, being 28, my assumptions are from today, looking forward - I didn't know there were no index funds in the 60s. Be that as it may, there were diversified, low volatility mutual funds, weren't there?
Zantra said:
I just wanted to also add that you have to take inflation into account. So 600K in today's dollars will only be worth a percentage of that in 30 or 40 years. 600K sounds great now, but in 30 years when it costs 20 bucks for a gallon of milk it won't buy nearly as much. If you're not staying ahead of inflaction and the value of the dollar, in addition to the 8-10 percent you're making on your investment, you won't be doing that great.
I did take inflation into account. All my numbers are post-inflation. The stock market, for example, has averaged something like 12% over its lifetime or 8% after inflation - I used 8% in my spreadsheet. I consider it better to use today's dollars because while that $600,000 would be more like $1.5 million 40 years from now (guess), that number isn't one we can really comprehend - its tough to relate it to a real cost of living.
Mercator said:
Anybody thought about what would happen to the stockmarket if everybody would put his money on it?
Phew - it'd be a wild ride initially, but it'd eventually settle down to a slightly higher growth rate than it has today. But the people who had their money in first would be filthy rich.

Aquamarine, that article has nothing at all to do with index funds and decade-term investing. They don't rely on boom-bust cycles for quick profit (or loss). In any case, the article doesn't say anything bad about index funds (I'm not sure what your point is). What it does say is perfectly consistent with super-long term investing in index funds.
Dear friends, the key to successful long-term strategic investing does not rest in attempting to interpret endless day-to-day market noise. It does not rest in buying high and attempting to sell even higher, the so-called “Greater Fool Theory” advocated almost universally on Wall Street today.

The key to long-term investment success is to Buy Low and Sell High, and general market valuations as measured by P/E ratios and dividend yields provide the ultimate long-term buy and sell signals.
The caveat is that buying based on the long-term "waves" as the author calls them still requires interpeting market signals (albeit fairly simple, clear signals). Someone who is investing for retirement shouldn't be trying to read the signals at all until they get within about 10 years of retirement.
 
  • #28
FYI, the only investment guide I've ever read is . Its not a get-rich-quick guide, but rather a long-term prudent, frugal (sometimes insanely frugal) strategy.

I say "insanely frugal" because he recommends buying a used car because cars are a terrible investment (he's right, but my car is a toy...) and buying most of your groceries in massive bulk. The basis of that is his motto "a penny saved is two pennies earned." The logic behind that is that another $1 of income (from working overtime, for exmple) is taxed at about 40%, so you really only get $0.60 of it whereas a $1 saved is post-tax and really is $1 saved...plus growth.

Its short, easy to read, informative, and entertaining. I highly recommend it.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #29
russ_waters said:
Sorry, being 28, my assumptions are from today, looking forward - I didn't know there were no index funds in the 60s. Be that as it may, there were diversified, low volatility mutual funds, weren't there?

None of the financial counselers in my earlier years ever talked about mutual funds at all. They were pretty crude at the time, heavily loaded, and not regarded as a significant investment. The people who talked about investing to me in the 60s talked about two things: investment clubs, and real estate. But investment clubs were not a way to make a significant amount of money, they were just a hobby, promoted by brokerage houses to get the fees. And real estate required a lot of up front risk. My best buddy maxed out his credits cards to buy a beat-up apartment building that he and his wife then sweat-equitied in fixing up, and he went on from there to bigger and better deals, leveraging equity on new purchases. For about five years he had a lot of tension, and then broke through into real prosperity. But I was never up for that.

(Added)
BTW, a lot of the people I knew who did go strongly into the market were essentially wiped out in 1987.
 
Last edited:
  • #30
russ_watters said:
Aquamarine, that article has nothing at all to do with index funds and decade-term investing. They don't rely on boom-bust cycles for quick profit (or loss). In any case, the article doesn't say anything bad about index funds (I'm not sure what your point is). What it does say is perfectly consistent with super-long term investing in index funds. The caveat is that buying based on the long-term "waves" as the author calls them still requires interpeting market signals (albeit fairly simple, clear signals). Someone who is investing for retirement shouldn't be trying to read the signals at all until they get within about 10 years of retirement.
I should have been more specific about my point. Index funds should be timed and not just before retirement. So some thinking must be done. Here is a chart of the Dow, inflation-adjusted. Those who bought in 1929 and 1965 had to wait a long, long time before break-even. If at all before dying.
http://www.dogsofthedow.com/dow1925cpilog.htm
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
20
Views
3K
  • · Replies 204 ·
7
Replies
204
Views
30K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
3K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 85 ·
3
Replies
85
Views
13K
  • · Replies 48 ·
2
Replies
48
Views
9K
  • · Replies 19 ·
Replies
19
Views
4K
  • · Replies 78 ·
3
Replies
78
Views
41K