Eug
Senior Member
You may be right about the future of defined benefit pension plans, but the original discussion was specifically about the baby boomers, and their impact on the detached home market. IIRC, the statement was made that these baby boomers can't afford their retirements and are going to have to sell their detached homes in order to finance their retirements.This also sets up for intergenerational tensions. It is questionable if industry other than government can/will still be able to pay this going forward so especially late boomers may not get all the benefits they expect or were promised.
As for government, you can see that the rest of the "real economy" is being asked to pay DBB for workers when the majority have to plan for their own retirement. So they fund not only their retirement, but subsidize the "employees" of government. I would suggest that over time, the estimate average 20% higher wage/benefit in the government over private industry will have to be reigned in.
I appreciate Eug you said you are in the healthcare field in Ontario and a member of a DBB of government but I think we can both agree that while you personally are the recipient of an enrichment that is not fairly shared in society (and in so being are fortunate ), in the longer term that cannot continue unless the country as a whole gets much wealthier as there will resistance and demand eventually for change.
I said that while that may be true in certain cases, largely that won't be true, mainly because most of these homes are either already paid off or else will be paid off in the first few years of their retirements. Add in the bonus of having a large amount of baby boomers with defined benefit pension plans, and this scenario of a baby boomer retirement crisis in the near term just doesn't fly with me.