'Retirement Heist' compiles evidence of plundered pensions
By Steve Weinberg, Special for USA TODAY
Sometimes the real crime consists of activities considered "legal,"
despite the damage they cause. That adage has never been more apt than
when applied to the termination of pension funds by U.S. employers
large, midsize and small. Over and over, loyal, deserving employees with
modest incomes have watched their planned retirement savings disappear
because of corporate managers and pension industry consultants.
Journalist Ellen Schultz has been writing about such shameful behavior for a long time, mostly in The Wall Street Journal.
Now she has pulled together the copious, irrefutable evidence between
the covers of a book. It is shocking, and demoralizing. But will members
of Congress and federal agency regulators stop what Schultz calls
"retirement heists"? Probably not, unless voters make it clear the
incumbents will lose their jobs unless something changes. Unfortunately,
voters are rarely if ever that organized, no matter how much they have
been cheated by corporate chieftains.
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