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Posts Tagged ‘labor’

Stealing your 401K’s

June 14th, 2011 No comments

http://moneymorning.com/2010/01/27/retirement-plans/

 

http://www.sodahead.com/united-states/obama-and-the-democratic-congress-want-5-of-your-401k-to-fund-social-security–what-say-you/question-181810/

 

Two links on the plan to take your money,man o man it never ends.

 

The Democratic Congress along with Obama have a plan to Do Away with the Pay roll tax of Social Security. In its place- they want to take 5% of YOUR 401K deduction from your paycheck- and use that money to fund the Social Security Program. YOUR MONEY- YOUR INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT MONEY.

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According to widespread media reports both the U.S. Treasury Department and the Department of Labor plan are planning to stage a public-comment period before implementing regulations that would require U.S. savers to invest portions of their 401(k) savings plans and Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) into annuities or other “steady” payment streams backed by U.S. government bonds.

Folks, there’s only one reason these agencies would do such a thing – the nation’s creditors think that U.S. government bonds are a bad bet and don’t want to buy them anymore. So like a grifter who’s down to his last dollar, the administration is hoping to get its hands on our hard-earned savings before the American people realize they’ve had the wool pulled over their eyes … once again.

 

BLS Inflation Index How Much SSI Increase?

April 26th, 2011 No comments

http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/STATS/cpiw.html

 

Click to see the Bureau of Labor Statistics Data.  They have eliminated food and gasoline from the index to keep it down, but at this moment, the base number from OCT 2008 is 212.182.

2011 Jan   216.400 Feb   217.535 Mar   220.024  

 

The next increase, effective Jan 1, 2012, is ( 220.024/212.182 ) =  3.695% if costs did not change from Mar to Oct.

 

The index  has been popping, no matter how the BLS tries to rig the calculation.  Given that the index continues to grow as it has in 2011, the likely figures are:

 

Jan  216.400  Actual

Feb  217.535  Actual

Mar  220.024  Actual

Apr  222…

May  224…

Jun  226…

Jul   228…

Aug  230…

Sep  232…

Oct  234.000

 

The SSI adjustment would then be (234.00 / 212.182 ) =  10.282 % on Jan 1, 2012.

 

Does anyone think that Congress will decide to cut that in half, as part of the shared sacrifice?  This is the return of self-paid funds, without interest, after tax, that are again taxed at 80% of the amount paid out.

Unemployment opinion please?

March 6th, 2011 No comments

Hi Neighborhood,

 

I am wondering if anyone out there thinks there needs to be a reformation of the Unemployment Security System. The reason for this is the fact that we are not given a choice about having regularly appointed withdrawals from our paychecks from the time we begin to work.

It was intended to be a stop gap to help citizens in time of unexpected disconnect from work, to assist until new employment would be found. I would like to draw a comparison, and ask your opinion.

 

Well over 20 years ago, car insurance was made mandatory, (as in we cannot drive legally without it). We are obligated without choice to pay into a “shared risk” system, to protect us and the other involved persons in the case of an accident. It all sounds wonderful and even noble in some ways. But I ask you—what happens when you HAVE an accident? Does anyone come rushing to your aide, or do you have to fill out reams of paperwork, sweat bullets wondering if you will be charged for something that was not your fault, or worse that your accident is deemed unworthy of help when you are at fault, and that in any case your rates will be raised with or without cause at whatever time frame and reason the applicable insurance company can come up with? Is it not even more interesting to note that those long years ago, as soon as car insurance was made law, the cost of it skyrocketed out of all sane reasoning? That in particular reminds me of the fact that we the taxpayers are shelling out 53 Billion dollars per year in royalties to gasoline companies (C-Span-Friday 3-04), which is on top of the perfectly adequate money they are already making!

 

I don’t think I could cover someone else’s costs in the case of a car accident on my own with savings, so insurance would be necessary for me, but after INVESTING so heavily, I find it repugnant to be censured and used like some endless source of revenue, as I CAN’T afford to cover these things myself. Thank heaven I haven’t had an accident of the auto nature for a very long time.

 

But to get back to unemployment compensation, how different is it? What reasoning can anyone use to jack money from our paychecks from the time we are still kids just beginning to work, and then make us beg for the money we invested at the most vulnerable times in our lives? It is not like we ask for more than we paid in, unless we receive an extension. That is already calculated to the exact penny by Uncle Sam. Why should we have to appeal to anyone for money taken from our own pay, and shelled out to those who are considered more worthy of OUR earnings? If our tax dollars pay to run the system, there are no losses incurred to it from its support structure except the job losses themselves, and not everyone who invests is going to lose their job. So what’s the deal? I would prefer not to be upset by this, and just sublimate it somehow, but many are in a financial mess because of job loss, and now find that they can’t get or have to “pay back” their own benefits without current employment. If it was to help with future job loss, it might be profitable in a way, but some are close to retirement and not likely to find new employment. How applicable would that be? The paperwork involved is, well, a job in itself. I believe it would be better to use the money taken out of our pay for personal bank savings on our own, with interest added in case of job loss in the future, from the beginning, instead of having money funneled away from our labor, which we probably will not be able to use without going through a sometimes demeaning and further laborious process. In other words, do you think that Unemployment Security is not a cost effective method to cover stress and monetary failure FOR THE CITIZENS who pay for it? I would also like to know if that money is used for any other purpose than for unemployed individuals. The information on that seems not clearly evident to me. Exactly how does this service benefit EVERYONE who pays for it, either at times of unemployment or at retirement? Is the money transferred into Social Security retirement benefits when each of us becomes too old to work? What does it feed when we die, anything we are made aware of? If you have any information in this regard, please post it? If this is not a cost efficient system for the American citizen, then it is time long past due for the American citizen to put an end to it, by public petition and vote. After all, we don’t go around losing jobs for other people, and should not be penalized as though we did, if the insurance can’t or won’t benefit all who are billed. This process also adds to the burden of the nation’s employers in the reporting and extracting of the funds involved to be sent to the government. These benefits are not “entitlements”. They are a debt that should be paid TO US in time of need, and if deemed in any other light should be ended, the monies involved being returned to the applicable citizens or their families after death. We are all too strapped to have our hard earned dollars be filched right out of our paychecks for any other purpose, and especially without the possibility of gaining interest for our personal use. Do you suppose that Unemployment Security invests it, and wonder what is done with the possible proceeds from the possible investment? Where IS our money going?

 

Should the rest of us pay for public employee benefits gained by intimidation?

February 17th, 2011 No comments

When times were good and every public employee wanted to retire after 20 years on the job and receive benefits that would grow at 8%/year for the next 40 years, no one did the simple math.  It was just easier to give in to threats and intimidation by unions who used monopoly tactics identical to those outlawed over 100 years ago for companies that wanted total control of a specific market. The simple math is that this means your labor costs will double approximately every 10 years and you will soon have more people retired and not doing the job than those actually working on the job. Now when the federal government says it will help some of those states with the financial problems caused by these practices, the rest of us are expected to pay to bail out those who were irresponsible. Subsidizing irresponsible states, irresponsible organizations and irresponsible individuals is economically absurd and one of the root causes of the American Revolution where those without power were expected to provide a titled English aristocracy with a lifetime of leisure. And to think there are some who imagine that one of the root causes for the American Revolution is actually constitutional because humans have changed behavior in the last 200 years. Human behavior has remained identical throughout both recorded history and even extends in primate behavior, so why would we imagine it could change in a brief 200 years?

 

So now are left with public employees who no longer have to pass the rigorous civil service exams created by the 1872 Civil Service Law, with more retired than working, with workers who have a total sense of entitlement and with many who are hopelessly incompetent when compared to those in industry, but reportedly paid almost twice as much in wages and benefits.

 

And to think we actually have some who believe this is financially sustainable?  Retire at 40 with $50,000/yr. At 50 the pay becomes a $100,000/yr. At 60 it again doubles and at 70 it doubles again, even as the drudges still working are getting $50,000/yr those at the highest level on retirement pay are getting eight times more. It is called a geometric progression and we should have had more who realized how absurd these promised benefits actually were and what a threat they were to the economic well being of the country.

 

Nov. Unemployment Rate Up to 9.8%

December 19th, 2010 No comments

“The number of unemployed persons was 15.1 million in November. The unemployment
rate edged up to 9.8 percent; it was 9.6 percent in each of the prior 3 months.”
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm

 

The bad news stubbornly remains, well, even worse than predictions. We’ve been told all along to expect high unemployment numbers to linger for several years during yet another jobless recovery, but I suspect that we’re actually being told to expect NO jobs recovery.  The several (three to five) years of high unemployment happens to coincide with the retirement of the boomers who are leaving the labor market and therefore gradually clearing the way for younger workers to be rehired. All the latest headlines and announcements from DC about the two year tax cut extensions stimulating the economy and creating jobs is nothing but hot air to give us a warm fuzzy through Christmas after which reality 2011-A New Series begins its run. The point is, if tax breaks which hold down federal revenues and create more deficit spending possibly could create new jobs we should be neck deep in them already. Count on a lot more fiddling while Rome burns.

What Good Is Wall Street?

November 23rd, 2010 No comments

These are the people that caused the Republicans to suspend the 2008 presidential campaign so everybody could return to Washington and   authorize an emergency 1 trillion dollar government bailout for.

 

” many people i n the City and on Wall Street are the financial equivalent of slumlords or toll collectors in pin-striped suits. If they retired to their beach houses en masse, the rest of the economy would be fine, or perhaps even healthier.

Since 1980, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the number of people employed in finance, broadly defined, has shot up from roughly five million to more than seven and a half million. During the same period, the profitability of the financial sector has increased greatly relative to other industries. Think of all the profits produced by businesses operating in the U.S. as a cake. Twenty-five years ago, the slice taken by financial firms was about a seventh of the whole. Last year, it was more than a quarter. (In 2006, at the peak of the boom, it was about a third.) In”

Read more http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/11/29/101129fa_fact_cassidy#ixzz165VdYLYa

Labor Day Wild Card — 9.6.10 – Huckleberries Online – Spokesman …

September 7th, 2010 No comments

I’m going to enjoy Labor Day, like the rest of you today, by not working.

Go here to see the original: 
Labor Day Wild Card — 9.6.10 – Huckleberries Online – Spokesman …

Solidarity Online » Independents calling the shots is no shift to …

September 1st, 2010 No comments

But nobody could call the NSW parliament a model of democracy or one that delivers for ordinary people. NSW’s Labor government has left the state’s public services crippled and seen the influence of property developers on government run …

Excerpt from: 
Solidarity Online » Independents calling the shots is no shift to …

Don't wait to control your credit | UK Credit Card | Apply Online …

August 20th, 2010 No comments

Don’t wait to control your credit CREDIT cards are back in the news with promises by the Labor party that pre-approved increases in limits on credit cards .

Read the original here: 
Don't wait to control your credit | UK Credit Card | Apply Online …

How To Apply On-line For A Business Credit Card | Credit Card Advices

June 26th, 2010 No comments

You say in your office, juggling figures, estimating projected income, and sweating nervous perspiration. The end result of all this labor and.

Originally posted here:
How To Apply On-line For A Business Credit Card | Credit Card Advices