How America’s 401(k) Revolution Rewarded the Rich and Turned the Rest of Us Into Big Losers
By Lynn Stuart Parramore
September 23, 2013
| It was a bad idea from the get-go, but new research shows that
America’s 401(k) revolution has left us even worse off than we thought.
Here’s a look at how we got into this mess, and where it will take us if
we don’t wise up.
Thirty years ago, as laissez-faire fanaticism took hold of America, misguided policy-makers decided that do-it-yourself retirement plans, otherwise known as 401(k)s, would magically secure our financial future in the face of gyrating markets, economic crises, unpredictable life events, stagnant wages and rampant job insecurity. It was an extraordinary shift in thinking about public policy: Instead of having predictable streams of income from traditional pensions, ordinary people with little financial expertise would suddenly transform themselves into financial gurus, putting money aside and managing complicated investments in tax-deferred accounts.
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