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Overview“Crack open this book and enter a bromide-free zone. Jane White knows why American families feel as if they are on a treadmill running out of control, and she explains the reasons with clarity, insight, and rare honesty. She also offers several practical suggestions for how we as individuals, families, and a nation can get out of the mess. Policymakers would be wise to listen.” Evan Cooper, Deputy Editor, InvestmentNews “This eye-opening book sounds the alarm about many Americans’ dim financial futures if consumers, businesses, and politicians don’t change their ways. Jane White lays blame and names names. Until change happens, White offers prescriptions for your biggest money concerns--retirement, housing, college costs, and credit cards--featuring tried-and-true advice.” Gregory Karp, Syndicated Newspaper Columnist and Author of The 1-2-3 Money Plan and Living Rich by Spending Smart “Americans need this vigorous wake-up call if they are to make it through the first half of the 21st century. They are burying themselves in debt--for education, for homes, and for toys--leaving too little for savings and investment. Jane White shows them where they are going wrong and how they can put themselves right.” Thomas G. Donlan, Editorial Page Editor, Barron’s National Business and Financial Weekly “Jane White has written a barnburner of a book. Though the title may cause alarm, America, Welcome to the Poorhouse is ultimately reassuring. We can protect our own financial futures if we get wise--and get together to demand real change.” Jacob S. Hacker, Author of The Great Risk Shift: The New Economic Insecurity and the Decline of the American Dream Too many American families are racing toward financial catastrophe--saddled with exploding credit card and college debt, out-of-control housing costs, and underfunded 401(k) accounts. America, Welcome to the Poorhouse reveals the political and economic forces that got us into this predicament, strategies to get Congress to enact needed reform, and practical tips you won’t find anywhere else on how to make the most of your money until reform happens. White offers indispensable practical advice for regaining control of your own financial future--specific strategies for reducing your debt, safeguarding your retirement, and helping your children get the education they’ll need to compete in today’s world. Shrimp on the barbie, Koala bears, and a secure retirement. Why most Australians will end up with at least half a million dollars in their version of a 401(k) plan--and what we can do to transform our 401(k) plans into actual pensions. How the mortgage industry lobbied to dismantle regulation and offer bait-and-switch adjustable rate mortgages. How to protect yourself--no matter what happens. Your personal plan for saving for retirement, finding “bargain” colleges, and getting out of credit card debt. How to build a citizens lobby that wins. Making taxpayers as powerful as the so-called financial services industry and getting rid of the members of Congress that do its bidding. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jane WhitePublisher: Pearson Education (US) Imprint: Financial TImes Prentice Hall Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 14.50cm Weight: 0.378kg ISBN: 9780137020171ISBN 10: 0137020171 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 15 October 2009 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1 Part I: 80% of Americans Can’t Afford to Retire Chapter 1 Why You Can’t Retire from a 401(k) Plan: You Won’t Have Ten Times Your Salary in Your Account at Age 65 9 Chapter 2 How to Save Wisely Until We Get 401(k) Reform and How to Make Reform Happen 35 Part II: How the American Dream Turned into a Nightmare Chapter 3 The Mortgage Mess: It Ain’t Just Subprime[md]It’s Half of Americans in Overpriced Homes 55 Chapter 4 How Laws Protect Banks, Not Borrowers, and the Reform We Need 67 Chapter 5 The Fix: Refinance to a Fixed-Rate Mortgage; Move to an Affordable Region 81 Part III: College Is Unaffordable When the Majority of Americans Need Degrees Chapter 6 Why We Need More College Graduates to Compete with China and India 105 Chapter 7 How Sallie Mae Lobbied Congress and “Enticed” Colleges to Offer Its Loans 114 Chapter 8 The Fix: Grants, Government Loans, and Colleges that Are Free 129 Part IV: 35 Million Americans Are Drowning in Credit Card Debt Chapter 9 How Credit Card Debt, Home Equity Loans Get You Over Your Head in Debt 141 Chapter 10 The Fix: How to Get Out of Credit Card Debtor’s Prison 151 Part V: Real Campaign Reform That Puts Citizens, Not the Business Lobby, First Chapter 11 How Big Business Owns Both Political Parties 167 Chapter 12 The Fix: Replacing Corrupt Politicians with Ones Who Work for Taxpayers 177 Conclusion The Big Fix: Recruit the Smartest Workers from Around the World, Send Most Kids to College, Measure Household Wealth 191 Endnotes 205 Index 237ReviewsThe starkly titled America, Welcome to the Poorhouse, talks about the severe lifestyle changes ahead for future retirees if they don't prepare now. -- The New York Times, October 23, 2009. Author InformationJane White is Founder and President of Retirement Solutions, LLC, which promotes 401(k) reform and provides investment education. In 2007, at the U.S. Department of Labor’s invitation, White presented recommended 401(k) contribution rates to the ERISA Advisory Council. As a result of White’s testimony, the Working Group on Financial Literacy recommended that the DOL “encourage plan communication that uses income replacement formulas and final pay multiples.” A Congressionally appointed delegate to the 2002 National Summit on Retirement Savings, White first observed the 401(k) savings crisis in 1993 as associate editor of Standard & Poor’s Your Financial Future, distributed to a half a million 401(k) participants. A former syndicated personal finance columnist for Gannett News Service, White first observed the housing bubble and the risk of adjustable rate mortgages in her 1991 book, The Cost-Conscious Homebuyer’s Guide. She has been interviewed by CNN and CNBC, and her articles have appeared in The New York Times, Barron’s, andEmployee Benefit News. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |