klr wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:RuleBritannia wrote:But why do they need to go up?
Because rate of aging of the population is putting more and more pressure on government pension and other expenditures paid in relation to older people. Europe's pension systems have today's workers financing yesterday's workers' retirements. Today, that equals more than 7% of GDP, and that's projected to double by 2050. If pensions systems continue to be based on the assumption that workers hugely outnumber retirees, they are headed for collapse.
Someone, of course has to pay for it. In 2012, the population of working age people in Europe is expected to start shrinking as the number of retired people increases. What are the choices? One, spend less on pensioners. Two, make younger people pay higher pension contributions. Or, three, have more people working more and longer.
And I am speaking as someone who is "supposed" to retire at 65, but who fully expects the retirement age to creep up by a year or two.

The fuckers that screwed it up were the early recipients of social security who didn't pay in shit, and yet collected benefits. It was easy to do then because we had the baby boom, so the population was increasing, productivity was increasing, tax revenues were increasing. So, the government ran it like a Ponzi scheme -- early "investors" were paid out by new rubes, I mean "investors." And, it continued on - benefits went up, and so did contributions.
Now, in the US, we no longer have the increasing pool of investors - we have a declining pool of investors, and an ever increasing demand for more and more benefits. This means that fewer workers continue to pay for more and more retirees. At some point, the system has to break, because younger workers are not going to sit still to being a slave of a 2 or 3 retirees, working to support just a couple of people.
It can't sustain itself. You need to either generate more revenue or cut payments.