The Extinction of Retirement
by
Michael Pento
Euro
Pacific Capital
Recently
by Michael Pento: Dr.
Keynes Killed the Patient
For the better
part of a century the foundations for a semi-comfortable retirement
for many Americans have rested on the financial pillars of rising
real estate and equity prices, positive real interest rates on savings,
the continued solvency of public and private pension plans, and
the reliability of national entitlement programs (Social Security,
Medicaid). But in the last few years, the economic sands have fundamentally
shifted and these pillars are no longer sturdy, some have cracked
completely. For many Americans, the traditional idea of a comfortable
retirement, filled with golf carts, cruises, and fishing trips,
is going the way of the dodo bird.
Over the last
decade incomes and job growth have stagnated, causing savings rates
to drop. According to Jim Quinn author of the Burning Platform,
60% of retirees have less than $50,000 in savings. Such sums won't
last very long, especially when consumer prices are up 3.2%, import
prices are up 12.5% and commodity prices are up 35% year over year.
What's worse, any savings placed in a bank will pay next to zero
interest and will likely not even pay for the fees associated with
the account. With cash savings essentially nonexistent, the other
pillars of income take on paramount importance. But these former
bastions of financial security are being washed away by a torrent
of red ink.
For years the
essential Ponzi-like structures of Social Security and Medicare
were concealed behind positive demographics. But once taxes collected
from current payers fall short of the required distribution owed
to current recipients, the ruse will be laid bare. That day is now
in the foreseeable future. With insolvency a real and present danger,
at least a consensus is now forming that Social Security must be
structurally altered if it is to survive.
According to
the Social Security Administration, in 2008, Social Security provided
50% of all income for 64% of recipients and 90% of all income for
34% of all beneficiaries. With these numbers, it's not hard to see
how even small cuts will spark big protests. Now try cutting the
$20 trillion prescription drug program and the $79 trillion Medicare
entitlements and watch the political sparks fly! However, given
the realities, it's hard to see how the program can escape deep
cuts.
In the past
many retirees could count on accumulated stock market wealth to
help fund retirement. Not so much anymore. As of this writing, the
S&P 500 is now no higher than it was in January of 1999. For
over 12 years the major averages have gone nowhere in nominal terms
and have declined significantly in real (inflation adjusted) terms.
The dreams of becoming rich from investments have crashed along
with Pets.com and Bernie Madoff.
Then there is always the supposedly safest asset of all-a retiree's
home.
Despite a misguided
faith that real estate prices could never fall, they have done just
that...with a vengeance. According to S&P/Case-Shiller, the
National Home Price Index has declined some 30% to levels not seen
since the middle of 2002. And prices are still falling, with the
rate of decline accelerating. The National Index dropped 4.2% in
Q1 of 2011, after dropping 3.6% during Q4 2010. This means that
only those retirees who have owned their homes for at least 10 years
have any hope of selling at a profit. Ownership of significantly
longer periods may be needed to have built up significant equity.
That leaves
public and private pension plans. But here again there are serious
issues. Let's just look at state public pension shortfalls. According
to the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research,
"States report that their public-employee pensions are underfunded
by a total of $438 billion, but a more accurate accounting demonstrates
that they are actually underfunded by over $3 trillion. The accounting
methods that states currently use to measure their liabilities assumes
plans can earn high investment returns without risk." Huge returns
without risk? Bond yields are the lowest they have been in nearly
a century! What world are these states living in? With few options,
the states will undoubtedly look to the Federal government (taxpayers)
for a bailout. Failing that, cuts are inevitable.
The sad facts
are; Americans are broke, the real estate market is still in secular
decline, stock prices are in a decade's long morass, real incomes
are falling, public pension plans are insolvent and our entitlement
programs are structurally unsound. If the pillars that seniors have
relied on in the past fail to miraculously regenerate (and there
is certainly no reason to believe they will), all that most retirees
will have will be freshly printed greenbacks that come from a never
ending policy of federal deficits and an obliging Federal Reserve.
Unfortunately, the inflation that will result from such a policy
will sap most of the purchasing power that those notes possess.
In other words, for most people retirement is now an illusion, and
many Americans will find themselves working far longer, for far
less real compensation, then they ever imagined. The quicker we
realize this, and plan accordingly, the better off we will be.
June
16, 2011
Michael Pento is Senior Economist and Vice President of Managed
Products for Euro Pacific Capital.
He is a well-established specialist in the “Austrian School” of
economics and a regular guest on CNBC, Bloomberg, Fox Business,
and other national media outlets. His market analysis can also be
read in most major financial publications, including the Wall
Street Journal.
Copyright
© 2011 Euro Pacific Capital
|