US Seniors Need Stimulus Too

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Early in February we were reading Why Seniors Need Their Own Stimulus Program.  It was suggested that the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) should seek a deal with the government on behalf of the nation’s older citizens. AARP is a membership organization for people age 50 and over leading positive social change through information, advocacy and service.  The pitch was that things would be getting tougher for seniors, so there should be an infrastructure program for the reinvention of our communities to fit the needs of an aging population. 

No-one has picked up this clarion call as far as we can see.  Indeed the latest headline is asking Will the Stimulus Package Leave Vulnerable Seniors in the Cold?  Anyone visiting Recovery.gov will learn that its goal is to be the “centerpiece” of transparency and accountability in the implementation of the stimulus package. In a special section on “Where is Your Money Going?“, the website reports that $81 billion will be devoted to “Protecting the Vulnerable.”  Unfortunately clicking through to learn more about how the vulnerable will be protected, provides few details.

New information on the allocation of funds will be posted on Recovery.gov as it becomes available.  We trust that this vulnerable section of society that has few powerful lobbyists is not forgotten in the collective concern for recovery.

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Long-Term Care Concerns Fuel Seniors Home Care Growth

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LTC is A Key Part Of Retirement Planning

As the US Congress prepares to debate health care reform, long-term care for seniors is likely to be a crucial part of the debate. Long-term care has become hugely expensive in recent years—the average cost of a year in a private nursing home reached $76,285 in 2008, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.  At least 70% of people over age 65 will require long-term services at some point, and will need those services for an average of three years.

A preferred solution for many is to stay in their own homes.

The population is aging, but more people want to stay put. About 89 percent of those 55 and older would prefer to live out their lives in their homes, according to an AARP survey. And the older they get, the less inclined they are to leave.  The survey found that 92 percent of people 65-74 want to age in place. For those 75 and older, about 95 percent want to remain in their homes as long as possible.

Who will help care for them? The need for caregivers and home-care aides is growing. Even in this ferocious recession, health services is one of the few sectors where jobs are going unfilled.  So not surprisingly, Senior home care companies are booming.  While many companies are struggling in this recession, those that provide home-care to Canada’s seniors say they’ve been surprised and delighted to find business booming.

“Our client base has been growing by over 25 per cent across Canada,” says John DeHart, co-founder of Nurse Next Door Home Healthcare Services.  Another provider, Home Instead Senior Care,  says revenues increased by 24 per cent in 2008 and it projects similar growth for 2009 from 22 independently owned locations across Canada.

Families are trying to defer assisted-living facility costs by keeping aging parents in their own homes as long as possible. When seniors need more help with daily tasks like dressing, cooking and housework, government-provided care is limited and goes only to those in greatest need, leaving many families in search of a way to fill the gaps.

The alternative solution of moving to a retirement community is not risk-free in this major recession. Neil Prashad, president of Origin Retirement Communities, acknowledges that the company’s potential client base is “very, very spooked” by the economy, particularly because they live on fixed incomes. Home care may not afford the same easy life style but it involves much lower costs.

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Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS), the Lloyd’s Banking Group Albatross

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As far as the title goes it should be clear that the word albatross here is not following its American usage as a term for a double eagle, or 3-under par on any one golf hole.  Rather we intend the British usage where it means an encumbrance, or a wearisome burden as in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s poem, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.

This blog was not intended as only a record of the gyrations of the UK banking meltdown.  However today’s headline almost passes belief.  Pressure on Brown as Lloyds ‘to lose £26bn’.

LLOYDS Banking Group could suffer additional losses of £16 billion, analysts warned as they downgraded the firm’s credit rating. The withdrawal of the triple-A rating by Moody’s Investor Services follows the banking group’s profit warning of a £10 billion loss.  But according to analysts, Friday’s predictions, blamed on the risky acquisition of Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) by Lloyds, will be just the beginning of even deeper losses during the downturn.

This puts into even greater contrast the kind of headline we all saw only six days ago: Lloyds chief executive Eric Daniels ‘won’t take bonus’ for last year.

Lloyds Banking Group is 43% owned by the taxpayer and his decision emerged hours before he and other bank chiefs were due to face a grilling from MPs.  Tory MP Michael Fallon, vice-chairman of the all-party Commons Treasury committee, stressed that publicly owned banks should cut back dramatically on the special payments.

Further Stop Press Item: Chancellor sets RBS bonus limits

Chancellor Alistair Darling has announced that the government is limiting bonuses paid out to staff by the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS).  Mr Darling said bonuses at RBS would be cut from the £2.5bn paid last year to £340m. There would be “no reward for people who have failed,” he added.  And bonuses will no longer be paid in cash, but in shares.  The bank would pay “the minimum it can with regard to its legal obligations,” the chancellor said, referring to the fact that some employees are contractually obliged to receive bonuses.

Alistair Darling was quoted as saying, “What you’re now seeing is a cultural change”.  Hopefully this is the start of much more realism in the way the UK Government is tackling this whole sorry mess.

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Pensions Information Google May Not Show You

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Google may know a lot of information about pensions but it may not always show all it knows.  This comes to mind because I happened to stumble on some Electric information from Pensions World, which is not all that visible to search queries.

Take a surf with Robin Ellison through the world wide web and discover pensions at the touch of a button.  There is a lot of pensions law out there. There are plenty of books; increasingly however, electronics are adding a new approach to finding and interpreting the flood of new rules and regulations.

The reason why this is less visible than it should be is that normally it is visible within a framed web site at Pensions World. Wherever you go on the website, the URL never changes in the address field.

Google does acknowledge its problem with Frames.

Google supports frames and iframes to the extent that it can. Frames can cause problems for search engines because they don’t correspond to the conceptual model of the web.

If you use wording such as “This site requires the use of frames,” or “Upgrade your browser,” instead of providing alternate content on your site, then you’ll exclude both search engines and individuals who’ve disabled frames on their browsers.

Another website in the Frozen UK Pensions field that has some good information slightly buried is that for the British Australian Pensioner Association.  Here are some of the web pages that are worth exploring on frozen pensions.

As a footnote for the technically-minded, it should be noted that by mentioning all these extra web pages here, they will now be much more visible in Google.  There are now direct links to them that in Google’s words probably ‘correspond to the conceptual model of the web’.

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UK Banking Meltdown Consequences

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It is hardly surprising, given the UK banking meltdown to see headlines such as Era of big bonuses for bankers to end as Lloyds attracts scrutiny.

Ministers joined ranks in condemnation of the payments.  David Cameron, the Tory leader, proposed that bonuses in taxpayer-funded banks be capped at £2,000.  Sources close to the Prime Minister said that a cap on such payments could not be ruled out.

The pressure for new curbs increased after reports that Lloyds planned to pay out £120million in bonuses for last year. On Friday the bank gave warning that its subsidiary HBOS had lost £10billion – £1.6billion more than expected.

That is only one of the consequences of this devastating situation.  More importantly, questions remain over who carries the can for the banking meltdown

How much did the bankers know about the impending crisis and how much advice did they ignore as their businesses headed to the edge of a cliff.

Paul Moore, former head of regulatory risk at HBOS, alleged that he had been sacked, threatened and gagged four years ago after raising concerns that HBOS was growing too fast. He claimed Sir James Crosby, head of HBOS, had dismissed him and that it was “his decision and his alone”. Moore sued HBOS for unfair dismissal under the whistle blowing legislation and the bank settled while subjecting him to a gagging order.

The article goes on to explore how well the Financial Services Authority (FSA) has been fulfilling its mandate.  The culture there is too relaxed and chummy.  There is a greater need for ‘challenge’.  Competent people must be in place and the right questions must be asked and answered.  Truth and consequences must be the new order as a result of this horrendous banking meltdown.

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The Aging Population In Canada

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One news headline today is hardly news. An aging population is changing Canada.

Where was the federal government 25 years ago when it was crystal clear that starting about now Canada would become a nation of seniors?  It was around 1984 that reports like the one recently released by Infrastructure Canada needed to be drawn up. Governments and business routinely think in terms of decades, and even centuries. Why this one seemed to get away from our leading elite is a bit of a mystery.  The report finds that no part of infrastructure will be left untouched by the needs of the increasing number of retiring and aging baby boomers.

The report mentioned is titled Population Aging and Public Infrastructure: a Literature Review of Impacts in Developed Countries.

The report is available in PDF format and deals with the following issues:

Canada faces significant demographic shifts in its population as the proportion of seniors increases at a higher rate than any other age cohort for the first time in its history. This demographic shift will have significant consequences on a wide range of issues that affect all Canadians. The effects of aging demographics will impact demand for health services, labour markets, public finances, and the provision of public infrastructure.

Another useful website to explore on these aging population issues is the About Canada website on Aging.  It highlights some of the questions we all should be asking.

A Canadian born in 1960, for example, can expect to live 20 years longer than a Canadian who was born in 1900. Meanwhile birth rates have declined, so that a growing proportion of the population is over 65. By the year 2031, approximately 20% of Canada’s population – one in five – will be seniors. This fact has important consequences for Canadian society. Who are these older Canadians? What are their roles in society? What are their needs? How will they be taken care of?

It is surprising that there is not enough discussion about these matters given the increasing number of aging baby boomers.  Although British Columbia is the province most affected, this aging population issue must be addressed in all provinces of Canada.

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Seniors Money or Senior Money

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If you are looking for the Seniors Money website or for information on reverse mortgages, then please read on.  There is important information for you later in this post.

It was a post from Loren Baker,  Use Keywords in Your Business Name for Local SEO, this morning that reminded me to check whether Senior Money Memos is a website that is easily found in Google.  As for any other blog, some time was spent initially considering whether it should be Seniors Money Memos or Senior Money Memos.  Which was likely to produce more Google visitors?  In that analysis, Seniors Money might have been preferable but there were more domain choices available for Senior Money so that was the name that stuck.

Google searches on Seniors Money and Senior Money now show that in two months since this blog started not too much has changed.  Nevertheless as of today, this blog comes up at #2 for Senior Money and #12 for Seniors Money.

seniors money

One domain name that took my fancy was seniorsmoney but both the dotcom and dotca versions were already taken. These sites are concerned with reverse mortgages, which are proving somewhat difficult for some of those who have entered into such arrangements. The dotcom website belongs to Seniors Money International and provides links to a series of other websites dealing with reverse mortgages.  These provide reverse mortgage services in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa and Spain. The Canadian website is currently showing the following message:

reverse mortgages

The inserted message appears when your mouse hovers over a small red asterisk, following the sentence, You retain ownership of your house.  It is certainly a very appropriate caution.

Perhaps given current global economic conditions, reverse mortgages will not be reappearing on the seniorsmoney.ca website for quite some time.  It might have been useful if that  seniorsmoney.ca domain had been available two months ago.  However by working more with Senior Money Memos, perhaps its ranking for Seniors Money will also improve.

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UK MPs Gold-plated Pensions Under Serious Review

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When so many, and in particular pensioners, are suffering world-wide in the global financial crisis, it is almost unbelievable to see the UK Telegraph’s story Gordon Brown to scrap final salary pensions for MPs.

Gold-plated final salary pensions for MPs could be scrapped, under plans put forward by Gordon Brown.  The Prime Minister has called for an investigation into how MPs’ retirements are funded because he fears they are becoming too expensive for the taxpayer.  MPs are still able to retire with large, taxpayer-funded, pension pots.

The move by Mr Brown could eventually allow politicians to propose scrapping all public-sector final salary schemes, currently enjoyed by millions including civil servants, council employees and health workers.  The current total liability of public-sector pensions to the taxpayer is officially estimated at £650 billion, but the Government has been unable to look at reforming the system while MPs still enjoy the same benefits.

If you are unaware of this situation, you may wish to read the full article and then consider which of the following best describes your reaction on reading this:

  • This just cannot be true. It must be an early April Fool’s item.
  • How can a Labour government not have canned this privileged pensions boondoggle years ago?
  • Why did Tony Blair not refuse his additional grace-and-favour pension (possibly over £64,000 a year) as Gordon Brown has done?
  • Why does it need to be studied?
  • What about all those UK pensioners who live in poverty?

Perhaps you have some other reaction to these UK MPs Gold-plated Pensions.  If so, please add a comment and tell us all what you think.

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Yes, Yes Minister, Please, Please

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yesminister

Some  have pointed to the link between the global financial crisis and a general acceptance of corruption at high levels.  In that light, today’s item from the UK Daily Mail is a real embarrassment for the UK politicians.  It suggests that Extraordinary freebies are enjoyed by Britain’s mandarins.

Extraordinary details of the lavish hospitality enjoyed by top civil servants have been exposed.  Senior mandarins were wined and dined by blue-chip companies and treated to days at the races, nights at the opera and tickets to major sporting events.  Sir Brian Bender, one of the highest-ranking men in Whitehall, accepted invitations to 52 events  -  an average of one a week.

Remember that the same newspaper at the end of January was headlining the bonuses that Cabinet civil servants had received, so it would not appear that they really need the freebies.

Cabinet Office mandarins last year pocketed almost £ 1million in bonuses, it has emerged.  The senior civil servants received an average bonus of almost £9,300 each last year.  A total of 105 payouts were given at a cost to the taxpayer of £972,500.  The scale of the Whitehall bonus culture was met with dismay by campaigners, at a time when many workers fear losing their jobs in the recession.

We are living through extraordinary times and certainly it is not the time for business as usual.  Equally one would hope that we can get away from government as usual if this is the way it has been conducted.

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Bankruptcies Soar And There Will Be More

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As a confirmation of the depth of the recession around the world the numbers of filings for bankruptcy seem to be soaring wherever you look.  Here are just some of those headlines.

Canadian bankruptcies soar 47 percent in December

The Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy said Monday 8,299 individuals and businesses went bankrupt in December, up from 5,659 for December, 2007, a jump of 46.7 percent.  The latest numbers are a staggering sign of how quickly the Canadian economy has slowed.

Japan company bankruptcies soar

Corporate bankruptcies rose 16 percent to a six-year high for the month of January, and the number of bankruptcies among listed companies is already at a record high for any financial year since World War Two, research firm Tokyo Shoko Research said.

Personal bankruptcies ballooned in Mass. US, last year

“There were 11,638 filings under Chapter 7 of the US bankruptcy code last year, up from 8,245 in 2007 and more than double the number in 2006 when there were 4,698 filings,” the Warren Group, a Boston firm that tracks such data, said in a press release. “Nearly all of the filings, or 98 percent, were by individuals.”

Record numbers are declared bankrupt in the UK as recession bites

The number of people being made bankrupt hit an all-time high during the last three months of 2008, as the country’s worst recession in three decades left thousands of individuals unable to pay their debts.

The increase in the number of people declaring themselves insolvent was particularly high in Scotland and Northern Ireland – jumping 75 and 39 per cent respectively in the final quarter of 2008, compared to the same period a year ago. In England and Wales, there was an 18.5 per cent jump in personal insolvencies. In total, 35,694 people declared themselves insolvent across the UK during the quarter.

Numbers are up for both personal and company filings for bankruptcy.  However given the recent fate of Iceland, questions are even raised about the bankruptcy of countries.  The Huffington Post suggests that the UK Will Be Hardest Hit By Global Recession: IMF.

World economists predicted today that the UK would be hit harder than any other developed nation by the worst recession in more than 60 years.  The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) grim outlook showed the economy shrinking by 2.8 per cent this year, more than twice as bad as it previously thought and well above the 2 per cent average for advanced countries.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) also predicted that swollen levels of public sector debt would not return to pre-crisis levels for more than 20 years.

It may be a overly pessimistic view but Web TV Hub suggests that Britain itself may be on the road to bankruptcy.  You can read the details of its arguments in the following three part series on Bankrupt Britain:

Part 1: Europe Blames America While U.K Warned of Bankruptcy

Part 2: U.K Government Destroying Britain to Help Banks?

Part 3: Is the BBC Hiding Britain’s Bankruptcy?

With this concern for the possibility of the U.K government becoming bankrupt, the series suggests that many U.K news organizations are failing to inform the public of the issues in this argument.

The strength of an economy depends in part on the confidence that the government can generate in the nation.  Clearly in the US, President Obama has been able to create a confidence-building stimulus deal.

Obama’s success at steering a stimulus package from promise to reality is a confidence booster, in and of itself, almost without respect to the actual content of the package. A couple more accomplishments like this, and he might begin to create the illusion that he is an effective leader who can get things done. For a nation shell-shocked after eight years of fiascos, that could be a pretty key step toward facilitating an eventual recovery.

One hopes that other national leaders will be equally effective in building confidence through the economic actions they are taking to counter the recession.

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