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by ashtonkem
1751 days ago
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I guess you can slice it two ways. 1) The expected financial value of a pension. Especially assuming that the millenial in question won’t be willing to tolerate poor quality of life long enough to make it lucrative. 2) Belief that the institution backing the pension will be willing and capable of meeting their obligations in N years. Personally, I think I’d say that the pension would be close to the value of stock options, but I’d be unwilling to tolerate the crap long enough to actually earn a useful percentage of its theoretical value. |
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I knew someone who was close to hitting their 20 year pension in the private sector, but the company instead decided they had a performance problem in year 19.
While the federal government has less incentive to play such games, betting on illiquid financial offerings that are contingent on a single entity liking you for N decades and still being around after Y decades is pretty suspect.