Master of Ossus wrote:To the extent that it is possible to protect oneself from accidents, I have that angled covered through insurance.
Moreover, if you suffer a major loss right before retirement then that is really unfortunate, but there are investment strategies that are designed to immunize people from risks such as that one.
But you can not guarantee safety from such occurrences - you will
always have some vulnerability to them, which is why a social safety net is a good idea for
everyone/
Your problem MoO, is that you absolutely believe that if you take certain actions you will be magically protected from financial misfortune. And that's just not true. Yes, properly done investments do increase the chances you will live out your life in financial security but there is no guarantee. You can do all the right things in, say, your 20's, get in a disabling accident in your 30's that wipes out your reserves, leaves you maimed enough to diminish your income but NOT disabled enough to qualify for disability coverage... and you will never be able to afford to retire nevermind how prudent you were in making choices.
Discounting insurance. But go on.
Yes, I discount insurance. I do so because I have worked in the insurance industry and I know that it is far easier to exceed what you are covered for than most people realize.
Medical insurance as it stands in the US
will not [pay the full costs of cancer treatment, burn treatment, organ transplant, or on-going serious chronic care for, say, a quadriplegic. Most homeowners policies won't cover flood damage - and
millions of people are facing that problem
right now from Texas all the way to the Wisconsin border.
The problem is that you can make all the "right" decisions and take the "correct" actions and still be left in the cold. You may continue to believe that your intelligence and savvy protect you but that is an illusion.
Or, let's say you retire and a year later you suffer a natural disaster or fire and lose every single material possession you own, leaving you standing in a shelter wrapped in nothing but a blanket. Sucks to be you, right?
Discounting insurance. But go on.
Again, it would be extraordinary if you had insurance that would truly cover such a catastrophe.
And insurance companies DO get into financial trouble - AIG being the most recent example but it certainly has happened to others. If your insurer goes bankrupt the policy holders are shit out of luck.
Do you really have the means to replace your abode? (Insurance does not cover all forms of damage, as some of my neighbors are discovering the hard way). Oh, and add some medical bills on top of that, because maybe you were burned in the fire, or hurt during the hurricane or flood or tornado or earthquake.
The land that my house is on is worth enough for me to retire in some podunk village in Oregon, in that case, and still contribute substantially to my upkeep during that time.
If your land is underwater it will not be sellable. If your land is contaminated by hazardous waste it will not be sellable and indeed YOU may held liable for the clean-up. Real estate is not a sure bet, either. Entire towns have been wiped out, such as
Centralia, Pennsylvania. due to no fault of the people who subsequently lost their property.
But, moreover, the likelihood of any of the events that you've been desperately trying to describe since the start of this thread makes it almost absurd to plan for them.
And yet, they DO happen to people. And you are correct, the odds of them happening to a particular individual and their scope make it "absurd" to plan for them -
because almost no one COULD "plan" for them in the sense you mean. THAT's why we need a social safety net, to cover such catastrophes that, while unlikely, are still very much a possibility.
Particularly given that privatized Social Security provides significant benefits for people who are seriously harmed by the current Social Security regime (something that you have consistently discounted).
Unless your nestegg is some multiple of ten million you are not safe. Most people, even with prudent investing, will never be able to amass that level of wealth.
And, therefore, we should take privatized Social Security off the table... why?
Because:
1) The average person has neither the education nor the inclination to make the sort of investment decisions required.
2) It would make the situation
even worse for those unfortunates who suffer catastrophe because they would be left with diminished payments
3) Given the way the financial system is going down the shitter I can't fathom your arguments that private investment is inherently and always superior to government safety net program - if the big guys on Wall Street who are highly educated and do this for a living are drowning what hope is there for the amateur investor?
I would think that, given the current situation in the financial world, this is the WORST possible time to move to "privatized" social security.
But, you know, MoO, your argument has boiled down to constant repetition of "it's unlikely and it won't happen to me so fuck the unfortunate, I got mine". I'm tired of going round and round with someone totally incapable of empathy towards his fellow citizens who are less privileged than he is. Unless you can come up with something more novel than "it won't happen to me" I'm done arguing with you.