On Thu, 22 Nov 2012 22:00:35 -0500,
gfre...@aol.com wrote:
>
>I never even heard about private contractors until the mid 90s unless
>you were talking about a licensed guy who owned his own real company.
>Then it was up to him to pay himself first..
>The idea of making a line coder a "contractor" started during the
>Clinton administration when everyone says we were so prosperous.
>
I knew IT "line coder" independent contractors in 1980.
Billing $45 an hour "coding lines." Not bad in 1980 - or now.
And I was called a contractor by clients even when I wasn't
independent, but working (salaried employee) for body shops as early
as 1984. Some "contractors" called themselves "consultants."
Always thought that was as ridiculous as a 3-piece suit with a watch
fob. Or a bow tie on a grown man.
Since clients had me there under contract, "contractor" was fine.
They weren't small shops either. Don't know about CGA, who I was with
for about 4 years. Maybe 2,000 employees. Profit sharing, no pension
plan. CTG, who I had 10 years with, had about 4000 employees in '88
and offered only 401k and ESOP in '88.
All this predates Clinton.
The writing was on the wall for DB pensions when Wall Street realized
it could get their hands directly into workers' wallets with 401k's.
According to this
http://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v69n3/v69n3p1.html
even in 1980 only 38% of workers had DB pensions.
So you've basically fifteen-upped Mitt Romney's 47%.
By saying that 62% of people never had "real jobs."
Pretty crazy IMO.
There's a very big world of workers out there, so thinking your "peer
group" is representative is a mistake.
>>That's why Social Security will never go away.
>
>SS will go away when it falls from it's own weight, for all the
>reasons I worry about other pension plans.
>
>From a macro economic sense, you can't have a third of all adults in
>the country living off the labor of the other two thirds, particularly
>when most of them don't even make enough to pay income taxes.
Right. And it's "macro economically" impossible for the U.S. to be
what, 16 trillion in debt, and the DJIA at 13k. All a mirage.
Without going into the details of the many ways it can and will be
worked out, one thing is certain. SS, at least at a subsistence level
minimum, won't go away.
Old people won't be kicked to the curb in the United States of
America. That's commie stuff. And un-Christian to boot.