I think pensions were killed off in the 1980s. Replaced by 401k's that not everyone can take advantage of.
And if it isn't lost to stock market, people lose their job and drain the 401k trying to save their house before they end up losing it too.
There are millions of service workers, farm workers, self employed, small business owners that have nothing. Think your barber has a pension? Or the coffee-shop waitress down the street?
The people that work for large employers like mentioned rarely can stay long enough to qualify for those pensions. They are right-sized, outsourced and off-shored years before they make their retirement year.
Teachers are under attack and "everyone" wants to fire government workers and take their pensions away. By the way, I think people don't know that most government jobs have been replaced by contract firms so the workers aren't civil service or government workers at all. Those contract workers do not have pensions.
I don't have definitive sources for the number, but I personally know very few people, actually none, under 65 that get a real pension anymore.
The days of going to work for a career at the same place are long gone. The people that started their careers in the late 1940's to early 1960's don't have a clue what's really happened out here.
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Oh yeah, and I did not mean that no pension means no retirement plan. I just mean the traditional pension.
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sorry my post is not about film or Kodak's comeback.