'Systemic discrimination' refers to any structural feature of society which has the effect of disadvantaging certain minorities, even if it is not deliberately designed to do so. I wonder whether mandatory pension contributions collected from people with diseases which will almost certainly shorten their life expectancy so much that they will never live to collect the benefits amount to a form of 'systemic discrimination'? If people with AIDS, cystic fibrosis, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, type 1 diabetes, or endstage renal failure have to contribute a large portion of their income to job-related or government pension plans they will not likely survive to benefit from, aren't they being treated unfairly? Shouldn't everyone with a probable life expectancy which is too short to make it to retirement age be given the right to opt out of mandatory pension plans, given that their contributions will likely go just to benefit other people?
Which company do you know of that has mandatory employee contributions? The mandatory plans that I know of in the US require the employer to make the contributions.Social Security pays if you are disabled or retired. Disability actually pays more.
Quote from: Chicken Little on June 17, 2007, 08:55:03 PMWhich company do you know of that has mandatory employee contributions? The mandatory plans that I know of in the US require the employer to make the contributions.Social Security pays if you are disabled or retired. Disability actually pays more. Unions do this. State & City jobs do also, many of them are part of a Union.
2. You really don't know when anyone is going to die. If a normal, healthy person contributes money toward retirement but then is run over by a bus, should his family get back his money paid toward retirement?
It goes to the person who is your beneficiary.
To Zach's point, I would say that while young, healthy people in their 20's have to contribute to company or national healthcare plans which are mainly used by older, unhealthy people, these young people can in principle expect to be old and unhealthy themselves some day, so they are not being cheated over the long run. But when someone with a 20-year life expectancy has to contribute at age 30 to a benefit program which only starts paying out to people when they reach 65, then there is no possibility of the person paying ever to benefit from the program he is forced to support. It is a pooling of risks and resources applicable only to a group to which he cannot belong -- those who will live past 65.