As chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, I recently held a hearing on the retirement crisis in America.
At that hearing, I had the opportunity to hear from Sara Schambers, a fourth-generation autoworker from Livonia, Michigan.
What she told the committee was extremely revealing.
Sara’s grandfather was an autoworker at Ford Motor Company for three decades. In return for his work, he was able to retire at age 55 with a pension and good healthcare.
Sara’s grandmother was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease. She had to retire early because of the illness. But she didn’t have to choose between paying her medical bills and buying dinner for her family, because her job provided her with the retirement security she needed.
But retirement looks very different for American workers today.
Although Sara has been an autoworker for 17 years, unlike her grandparents, she will not have healthcare when she retires. She will not have a pension.
As she put it: “We have people leaving American companies after 30 years of service with nothing more than a ‘Have a nice day,’ and ‘I hope the stock market doesn’t crash.’”
Sara is not alone.
In America today, almost 45% of older Americans between the ages of 55 and 64 have no savings at all and no idea how they will be able to retire with any shred of dignity or respect.
And as frightening as the retirement crisis is for older workers, it is an even bigger concern for the millions of senior citizens who are no longer able to work, who have exhausted all of their savings and who have no pensions.
Incredibly and unacceptably, one out of every four senior citizens in America are trying to live on an income of less than $15,000 a year, while over half of our nation’s seniors are trying to survive on an income of less than $30,000 a year.
Think about that. How do you pay the rent, pay for health care and prescription drugs, and put food on the table on just $15,000 or $30,000 a year? The answer is that many cannot. That should not be happening in the United States of America.
According to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), we now have the dubious distinction of not only having one of the highest rates of childhood poverty in the industrialized world, we also have one of the highest rates of senior poverty compared to other wealthy nations.
In Denmark, only 3% of seniors live in poverty. In France, the senior poverty rate is 4.4%. In Germany, it’s 9.1%. In Canada, it’s 12.3%. In the United Kingdom, it’s 15.5%. But in America, over 23% of senior citizens are living in poverty.
In my view, that is unacceptable. It has got to change.
In America today, almost 45% of older Americans between the ages of 55 and 64 have no savings at all and no idea how they will be able to retire with any shred of dignity or respect.
Fifty years ago, it was not uncommon for corporations to provide workers with a defined benefit pension plan that guaranteed a monthly income in retirement.
Back then many corporations made a promise to their workers: If they worked at the same company for a period of time they would be rewarded with a monthly check that would enable them to live comfortably in retirement.
The longer you worked at the same company, the bigger your retirement check would be. And the employer would bear all the responsibility to fund the pensions of their workforce.
Sadly, those days are mostly behind us. As a result of a relentless 40-year war on the working class waged by corporate America, traditional pension plans have become an endangered species on their way to extinction.