It deeply saddened me to see those 90 year old cart pusher stories.
You need to be making some sacrifices now and hammering those retirement accounts hard and hopefully there will be enough between that and Social Security. Maybe not, but Social Security ain't gonna cut it and probably that's the part everyone agrees on.
Illinois has Secure Choice for employers of 5 people or more and it's basically a Roth account for people who don't have something at work. The federal government had MyRA for a while that invested in Savings Bonds, which was better than nothing, but it wasn't a law so things like that can be scrapped on a whim, and it was.
Illinois penalizes employers who don't at least enroll their employees in Secure Choice or show good cause that the employer is exempt and I agree with that.
If you are in your 30s now and pushing a pallet jack around at Walmart and wondering how feasible that is at 80, the short answer is that it's not and now is the time to be all "Hulk angry! Hulk smash!" Or at least just take the 6% they'll match.
You may even get up to $1,000 a year out of your federal taxes that you never ever have to pay for saving that money. So you put in $4400 a year and it really only took $1200 of your own money, and using traditional savings hels lower your AGI to qualify or increase the percentage of that credit.
Not doing this at the minimum is dumb. The law will change in 2027 to get even more generous because they really want you to save. The Social Security trust fund is not looking good. It's got single digit years left before everyone on it gets a 26% buzz cut unless it's fixed somehow.
It's those low wage workers that need the education about saving whatever you can now and why it hardly costs as much as they think, because even if Social Security pays you 100% of what it says it will, having several hundred thousand dollars sitting in a private account is going to mean that you can keep operating for a while when that's not going to be the case otherwise, while your coworkers who didn't save anything are falling apart and still working because they have to somehow.
Dave Ramsey quipped that people plan to have the government take care of them and as we all know, they're great at managing their own money.
There's probably not going to be a comfortable retirement and sitting around not being concerned about being on a conveyor belt speeding towards the slaughter is a quality I admire in my food.
I've had some fight or flight years and I'm not one to run away or back down. I realize that there's nobody that's going to take charge of our future except us. If Social Security pays us, cool. But I absolutely don't trust them to provide stability and security. Believing they will be there for you may keep you calm, but calm isn't always good.
My natural instinct has been said to border on paranoia at some points in my life, but it has actually served me well several times. I'm basically off the charts as a Machiavellian personality type. So I tend to be highly skeptical of motivations and prone to planning to be backstabbed. Anyway, that's saved me a few times.
The only thing I'd change about our 401(k)s are that they handed them to Bank of America and I'm not terribly thrilled with the investment options there, but you don't have to limit yourself to retirement account investing.
There's some reasons to be aggressive with the 401(k) even if you exceed the match and the options are not the best, like your creditors don't get it if you file bankruptcy at some point. Can't touch a penny. That's worth a lot in my opinion. Nobody knows what will happen that gets a huge hospital bill in their lap. There's just a lot of people out there with a "day by day" mentality and short term thinking to me are five year plans. Like the five year plan to get my spouse to US citizenship (which worked).
A lot of the reason why I haven't touched those Savings Bonds I bought in the 90s and 2000s that are still paying good interest, is also because it's a values statement to me. I look at them and it reminds me about how short a time 30 years is and that I was providing for myself when I was picking up jobs at 13 or 14.
I had a bout in my 20s where I let it all go for a while, but after 0% balance transfer scoop and toss, I got sick of having all that debt around and paid it. It's amazing what stress does to the brain when you're working and studying. You start letting it all hang out somewhere else. Not getting enough sleep, eating odd things in the middle of the night...
I couldn't do that in my 40s. If I don't get 8 hours in my own bed, I'm almost useless. I had to take a trip down to the city and stay in a hotel last year and it was a nice hotel (rooms start at $1,400), but I never sleep well in odd places.
Also, I don't really care about who is in charge of the world or the institutions. If they make me more money I'm all for it, I try never to let my personal feelings get in the way of making money decisions. Right now, I am making financial decisions based on what I see the logical risks are in the market. Uncertainty over what's even going to happen and how it will affect the stock market and corporate earnings are going to be confusing investors because it's hard to plan when you hear things like 25% tax on everything coming in from Canada and Mexico, then the next day it's like "Oh wait, nevermind, messing with you. Disregard. But maybe next month." and they're all threatening to do it to us. That's an investing nightmare is what that is. It's not orderly at all.
There's a lot of volatility and risk right now that makes owning the debts less uncertain. Their stock might be down 20% today but they still owe money on their debt.
I really wish the uncertainty would clear up, honestly. Undermining the USMCA FTA is probably the worst thing for workers and investors. It will have uneven effects on the market and may even be easy for foreign companies to game while not so easy for domestic industry that depends on North American supply lines and integrated markets and manufacturing.