Thursday, June 25, 2009

The end of retirement? Old age a burden on society?

WHEN Otto von Bismarck introduced the first pension for workers over 70 in 1889, the life expectancy of a Prussian was 45. In 1908, when Lloyd George bullied through a payment of five shillings a week for poor men who had reached 70, Britons, especially poor ones, were lucky to survive much past 50. By 1935, when America set up its Social Security system, the official pension age was 65—three years beyond the lifespan of the typical American. State-sponsored retirement was designed to be a brief sunset to life, for a few hardy souls. More...

See also:

  1. Wealthy pensioners in Germany kidnap and torture financial adviser...
  2. Woman kept dead mother's body for six years to collect benefits...
  3. Secret plot to let in 50 million African workers into Europe???
  4. Japan, where living up to a 100 years is no big deal...
  5. The horrible bingo of growing old...
  6. Japan: porn for the elderly...

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