- 2009.05.05, 08:45
- "[...] Assets in 401(k)s had jumped from $92 billion in 1984 to $3 trillion. The rise of mutual funds, combined with the '90s boom and America's demographic realities, did in fact help to drive the current financial crisis. While common sense told you that there was bound to be a crash—that there simply couldn't be that large a pool of genuinely secure, high-quality investments with the kinds of yields people had gotten used to in the 1990s—the global economy bought it nonetheless. "Because, you see," writes MSNBC financial analyst Jim Jubak, "it's the only way out for an aging world that's running a huge shortage of the real stuff. So investors were all too willing to buy fake investment-grade paper—at prices commanded by the real investment-grade stuff—until finally the con was revealed."
"In 2008, the average value of stock mutual funds dropped 38 percent; bond funds dropped 8 percent. Among 401(k) holders, older people who had worked and contributed for 20 years or more, and amassed substantial savings, fared the worst, losing an average of about 25 percent of value, even after counting the money they added through the years."
Pie jautājuma, kas notiek, ja pensiju fondus atdod privātajiem investoriem - un kam īsti tad kalpo privatizētais pensiju kapitāls: kā vārdā tiek veiktas investīcijas lai gūtu lielos peļņas procentus, un kas galu galā par visu samaksā. - 24 rakstair doma
- 6.5.09 17:33 #
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A no kurienes ideja, ka lai mainiitu politiku jaabuut _ieveeleetajam politikjim?_
- Atbildēt
- 6.5.09 18:03 #
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a tu pie mammas dzīvo, ja liekas, ka ēdamais pats no sevis uz galda parādās, un par dzīvokli nav jāmaksā?
- Atbildēt