doodle wrote:
If your average baby boomer has only saved 50,000 dollars and draws a social security check of 1500 a month, are we just going to watch as an entire generation of people falls to the poverty level?
Just a point of order: this scenario is hardly poverty. If this is how it actually does work out (IE the system doesn't fail or whatever) for them it will be fine.
Normally the conversation here is so over my head and someone usually states my opinion, I just lurk, but I’m coming out of the woodwork for this one because I respectfully have to say, and I mean no insult by this, I honestly laughed when I read this being described as poverty. No vitriol is meant toward doodle here, but I want to point out this situation is actually wonderful for the Boomers.
50k in savings and 1500 a month from Uncle Sugar is luxury in a post industrial economy as of the time of this writing and I will demonstrate using myself as the example.
I live a fat happy middle class America lifestyle. I have a smartphone, an absurdly powerful PC, air conditioning, a closet full of things I don't even use, etc.
I budget to spend $2470 every month after all pre tax deductions, 401k, pension deductions, and insurance premiums that are associated with my job, etc. I have a rule that once I’m out of money I can’t spend any more, so there’s never any debt, it’s basically a cash envelope system. These are real numbers I track in a spreadsheet, while I am rounding to the nearest $10 I’m not making this up or speculating in way, this is what it actually costs.
So it sounds like I’m at a tremendous shortfall and will have to downgrade my life considerably if I suddenly go to $1500 a month with 50k in the figurative bank. Indeed at first blush I would be screwed if the deal was I got $1500 a month and only had 50 grand otherwise.
However let us consider first the impact of being retired on myself. Of that $2470, at least $250 of it is spent keeping my job: gas to commute/go to sites, clothing, the occassional lunch/fundraisers/take out food. And I’m very conservative with the clothing and social eating, I want to make it clear most of this is dinosaur juice for having heavy commuting requirements that are a condition of employment. The real number usually hovers around $300 some months but for the sake of argument I’m assuming $250 like it is in a light month.
Anyway so right away I'm down to $2220 being the amount I actually spend to live as opposed to what I spend for the privilege of working.
From there, $1025 is my rent. That does cover trash, water, sewer and local taxes on rentals but not power or any other bills. It's so high because I live in a large city and it's expensive to buy or rent anywhere to live due to good old supply and demand. The median rent for a single person is actually $900 so I'm not that far above it. However I pay that much extra because I found a pretty good location that's only 7.5 miles from my usual job site on a route that shaves a lot of time off my commute.
There's other considerations too, I admit about $100 of that amount was for extravagant amenities I wanted and only about $50 of it is those taxes/fees I talked about. The bulk of the expense is the location. That's the reality is I'm paying to sleep and keep things at that location as opposed to one further away from the job.
However if I had no job (at least not one I dependend on for sustenance) I could live anywhere.
Right now I can think of a place where, if employment was no objective, I could move to literally today and pay only around $600 a month with the same fees included and have all the same amenities, in other words giving up absolutely nothing but the location which a retired person wouldn't need. I could even stay in the same metro area if I wanted to for that price, if I don’t have to commute into downtown every day my options are suddenly wildly flexible. I could live 30 miles away from that same downtown way cheaper.
So now I'm at $1795 a month in expenses having moved to a place with lower rent. I have not in any way downgraded my lifestyle either, I've just cast off the costs of being employed.
Well I currently save $250 a month in cash/taxable for catastrophic contingencies like job loss, to eventually replace my car and maybe someday aspire to something more. But if I’m retired, job loss isn’t a problem, and I’d move somewhere I wouldn’t drive hardly any at all.
Now bear in mind, I've not reduced my actual expenses I spend to feed, entertain, and amuse myself at all at this point, plus I'm retired in this scenario. And now suddenly I'm at $1545 a month. Well expenses exceend income so I'm in a bad way right?
Well If I have $50k in investments, well three percent of 50 grand is $1500, and while it's extremely debatable what the SWR actually is, that's in the ballpark of what most people consider the true SWR to be. If I put my 50 grand in the PP I should manage it just fine I'd think.
1500 over 12 months is $125 per month. Combine that with your $1500 SSA benefits and you have $1625 income. Income exceeds expenses so I could reduce my withdrawal rate from my 50k savings for safety purposes.
And I’m ignoring ideas like you could have some 15-20 hour a week low paid time filling job and still take home $600-$700 a month from etc. It’s ignoring the fact I’d move away from the expensive city to a cheaper one, etc.
So this scenario is hardly a problem, they are going to be just fine. Literally if they have nothing else they are going to live in constant air conditioning with high speed internet.
Bear in mind I haven't cut back on anything here, like I could get by on a $7 a month phone expense if I were retired, cutting another $73 off my monthly costs. And I have things I don't strictly need like my entertainment budget, going out, Netflix, etc. so there’s about $120 a month you don’t need to spend (I will grant you that money spent keeps me sane however if you had time to constantly go do free things you wouldn’t have to spend it).
My numbers also assume you still pay rent. Most people who are Boomers own houses, rental properties, RVs, etc., material wealth they bought with the money they didn't save, and can leverage that to reduce expenses even more. So again this is not poverty by any means.
I realize this is kind of missing the point that systemically this is a disaster I was just highly amused to see that scenario called poverty.