Agree w/cecilia. I don’t count on Social Security existing when I get there. There’s all kinds of dire predictions economically for around my retirement year. Most of the younger people believe in UFO’s and extraterrestrial life more than Social Security when they retire.
I started saving and investing young (age 22) when I was making peanuts…and never stopped…no emergencies ever will make me crack my nest egg. (this is what we said till our oldest child was badly injured and the insurance refused to cover the costs Long story) And I’ve been really down and out desperate before. I’ve drawn the line in the sand and said NEVER. Because while you can recover from being young and broke, you can’t recover from being old and poor. I am in touch with my Inner Bag Lady and boy, that’s a great incentive to saving and investing.
I’m not a stockpicker or a real estate investor or a wheeler-dealer…you don’t have to be those things to end up wealthy. It’s very simple, really, start young, contribute the most you can regularly, and invest in good growth stock funds, and NEVER touch it. Of course you also have to build up a good rainy day fund outside of retirement so you can deal with Murphy when he comes calling. (this is what my mother thought when the savings and loan bust came she moved in with us after she lost everything but her little SS)
I coach new younger employees about how to do it when they get started, and they get on board and follow through. It’s good to share the basic steps of personal prosperity with my friends so we can be old and rich together.
My parents grew up poor and hungry in a war-torn, depressed economy…but they moved to another hemisphere to pursue opportunity. No one is chained to a place. No one is holding a gun to your head. Make your choices, and if you choose to live in a depressed area without opportunity, own your choice and quit playing victim.
I live in Appalachia and there’s only a couple of other places in the country as poor and economically distressed as here, but there is opportunity here for those with the guts and work ethic to pursue it. You can do well anywhere if you pursue the right opportunity and make the sacrifices needed to grab it.
My number crunching shows me that even if I don’t contribute much more than a minimal % of salary to my savings and investments for the rest of my working career, even if returns are low and inflation is high, I am going to be fine. (I pray that you are correct and that there is nothing that eliminates your funds)The sense of peace is very good. But I’ve been doing the right things for decades with self-discipline and simplicity and it’s paying off. I’ve never sat back and blamed external forces for my rotten luck. That’s what the poor people do. (never blame anyone but understand that there are circumstances our of your control in some cases) It’s a mental block to personal and financial achievement. And I don’t want anyone to be poor and have that awful learned helplessness in their lives, so I am going to continue coaching others towards personal success and prosperity. And those things are possible entirely outside of whatever the hell happens to Social Security.
(BTW Social Security is not a personal savings account. It’s a safe in Parkersburg WV filled with IOU notes because the federal government has raided the trust funds dry for other spending to please the voters and stay elected. Rotten thieves.) (and this is the root of the situation)