| I have a pension from Accenture. |
| My mom worked for Kaiser Permanente doing HIV education for something like 7 years and has a monthly $600 pension. |
Why do you say excessive. I work as a SES equivalent at a financial regulatory agency and at 59 I will have a federal pension of $10,300 per month (128k per year). I started in government at 21 and I am highly compensated. My spouse is retired GS 15/10- 7k per month. |
| My sister-in-law is an elementary school teacher on Long Island. She makes >$150k/year (25+ years experience) and her pension will pay her 80% of her salary when she retires. |
Good for her, but that’s not really a non-government position is it? |
| One of my parents: Northrop Grumman. |
Very, very local government, as school districts are town/township entities. |
| Worked at three pharma companies, all with pension plans. |
| My ex wife has a generous pension from the UN in NY |
+1 Yes. And they are fat pensions too. |
| I have one from a Mining company. |
| I was at a large government contractor that offered one. Unfortunately, I was laid off before I reached the years of service requirement. Kind of stank because I wasn't putting much into 403b while I worked there. Though felt awful for people who were laid off much closer to the years of service requirement. |
In NY they are paid through the state pension system. |
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I wonder how long we will have pensions in this country. This current government hates, I mean absolutely hates pensions. I don't have a pension as I am in the private sector. But I am so glad some people still have them in the private sector.
Instead of applauding that some folks still have pensions, some of us in the private sector are so knee deep in our hatred and jealousy that we become haters. The biggest critics of pensions are private sector workers who don't have them. If you want one, join the public sector. |
When I was looking for public sector jobs out of grad school, pensions were not that appealing because they aren't portable and the benefits for new employees have been reduced. I work in public sector now but I wasn't eligible for a pension, they offered a hybrid 401k style plan instead that gave me a guaranteed interest rate. And a large match..I realize the benefit is small compared with my colleagues who do have pensions, but I appreciate that I can leave my job and take my money with me. I think this approach is more financially sustainable and more suited to today's environment where people don't plan to stay with an employer forever. |