Tom-D
Taxi to Parking
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Tom-D
General Aviation A&P/IA seems to be the norm, 62 years old with no savings.
Well, I started with nothing, and I still have most of it.
General Aviation A&P/IA seems to be the norm, 62 years old with no savings.
Listening to pilots giving financial advice is like listening to computer geeks giving advice about women.
Listening to pilots giving financial advice is like listening to computer geeks giving advice about women.
you know.....it's a liability requirement.General Aviation A&P/IA seems to be the norm, 62 years old with no savings.
General Aviation A&P/IA seems to be the norm, 62 years old with no savings.
I was briefly a professor of taxation, have been a CPA for 30 years, and have a Master of Science in Taxation.
Do you have a question, Clark, or are you just here to disrupt the class?
If your disagreement with Art Laffer is legitimate, surely you have an alternative economic position that you'd like to offer.
Then again, it's a pretty select group that, one way or another, has managed their money well enough to, for the most part, own a plane.
Like I said, a rarified group that may just have some ideas worth listening to.
I scrolled through all 9 pages of this thread to see Clarks enlightened response to Fast Eddie, so I could put my old economics minor to use, but there was no response...
Guess that means the old adage is still true - it is very easy to poke holes into someone else's argument, but much more difficult to present one of your own!
Are you surprised? People like Clark and AP do a drive-by, but can't stand up to questions about their premise, and just fade away.
Are you surprised? People like Clark and AP do a drive-by, but can't stand up to questions about their premise, and just fade away.
I just figured he was in training to be the new henning when he finally leaves us for good. Every forum has to have a "self appointed expert" on every topic known to man. That's an internet requirement somewhere, isn't it?
Then again, it's a pretty select group that, one way or another, has managed their money well enough to, for the most part, own a plane.
Like I said, a rarified group that may just have some ideas worth listening to.
well...?I've owned planes most of my adult life and have never even remotely been accused of managing money well.
??? A Baron or 310 costs between $25-$30k to own/operate 100 hrs a year. $40k a year is more than plenty for me to live on, more than plenty, I won't be going bankrupt.
Our own Dos Equis guy Henning even told us recently in a different thread that he was flying next to a volcano when it began erupting and had to alter his course because of the flaming boulders that were shooting out of the top.
Is there ANYTHING he hasn't done? Answer: not in his mind.
Our own Dos Equis guy Henning even told us recently in a different thread that he was flying next to a volcano when it began erupting and had to alter his course because of the flaming boulders that were shooting out of the top.
Is there ANYTHING he hasn't done? Answer: not in his mind.
No, I was running a yacht from our base in Jakarta out to the Mentawi islands for a surf trip, and that takes you right past Krakatoa. It's way scarier when you can only do 11 kts, couple weeks later the Tsunami hit as we were heading back.
Technically both private and public defined benefit pensions are supposed to have the money needed invested in separate funds. In reality many don't and you will see figures like a pension liability is 60% funded. One of the issues is that when investment income is doing well then nothing needs to get contributed but the company/agency. For companys they can even claim the excess income as profit which makes them look even better. It's when investments don't do well or lose money that it becomes a problem.Let's change the subject a bit and talk about pensions... Both public and private. I look forward to learning something here....(I don't have a pension, just regular retirement savings)
As I see it, a pension is a bit like SS. All the money paid out/oblogations is not sitting there in a lump sum to be drawn from. The public pensions have the right to tax to remain solvent. The private pensions have (had) some pretty loose requirements and fantastical estimations of future company and investment performance.
As someone who is a taxpayer and non-pension holder, I look at a pension payout and calculate what I would need to have in conservative/post-retirement investments to spin off the equivalent cash. I am not sure if this is still an acceptable calculation, but, to me, each dollar paid annually is worth about 25 in the retirement account (I'm using the idea of the 4% withdrawal).
So, someone getting $40k per year from a pension is receiving the equivalent of taking 4% from $1m sitting in conservative investments. This helps me both understand how important my own savings are, as well as communicate how a "nice $40k per year pension" is worth a million bucks...
Now, in reality, it is not $1m bucks. It is some portion of a pile of money under management PLUS dollars taken from current workers and profits. A great visual aid would be chart showing how many taxpayers or what profit margins and sales are needed to cover that part of the obligations...
It seems to me that if folks lucky enough to still have pensions could be shown this information, they would vote and act in a manner that encouraged fiscal responsibility. Some get it. Some don't.
As for the companies that have pensions that go under, who is to blame for allowing the rules to get so lax? I guess what I am getting at is that there is probably blame on both sides of the aisle...
Financial literacy and discussions like this aren't needed just in school, but at work, too...
He will be fine. We've decided to be a welfare State. There's no backing that bus up, once it's gone off the cliff.
I laughed today when I saw another "news" headline that said Greece was "running out of money". I'm pretty sure if you have massive debts, you ran out of money a long time ago. Germany just doesn't have any good reason to invade, since then they'd be responsible for the people there, too.
Where are we at now, have we hit $20 Trillion yet? Dude has no worries. He won't starve as long as our loans look a tiny bit better than Greece's loans.
The goal used to be to build wealth and try to leave it to family* to make each succeeding generation a little better off. There were always bound to be more failures at that goal than successful people.
We've now labeled those who's families succeeded at it, "evil rich people" and "trust fund babies" and the like. And granted, some of the offspring truly grew up to be azzhats, knowing they could do or buy anyone, ahem, anything. So some of the disgust is earned rather than just a stereotype.
*Obviously the goal of leaving it to family may not apply if you're single. And you don't want to leave it to the kids if they appear to be already turning into azzhats, as mentioned above. You know if they're going that route. Jut don't do it. LOL!
We will probably change our Will documents soon to leave anything we have left, if anything, to nieces and nephews unless a better option comes along.
Technically both private and public defined benefit pensions are supposed to have the money needed invested in separate funds. In reality many don't and you will see figures like a pension liability is 60% funded. One of the issues is that when investment income is doing well then nothing needs to get contributed but the company/agency. For companys they can even claim the excess income as profit which makes them look even better. It's when investments don't do well or lose money that it becomes a problem.
fiduciary duty and all that jazz, you know, that kryptonite for the finacíer class. We don't have to go the nanny state route and doom everyone to indigence whilst simultaneously complaining about the burden of paying for everybody, as long as we put the median income class first. Teach a man to fish type of thing. But what do we do? We steal the middle class man's fishing net and then complain the Country's gone to hell with swelling welfare rolls. I digress.
Funny, the other version that was posted here was henning was riding a motorbike and avoiding the flying boulders.
"The difference between fiction and reality? Fiction has to make sense". Tom Clancy
"No man has a good enough memory to be a successful liar". Abraham Lincoln
I'm sorry you have such a sad life that you have to tell lies about me to make yourself more impressive.
It's not about blaming the people for not seeing through it, they lack the option not to participate, and lack the capacity to self moderate. 80% of the species is stupid, and the .0002% know that well and follow P.T. Barnums teachings making full use of that fact. That is why mankind needs better leadership and option in financial market. Without those two, mankind will follow the path of greatest profit right into extinction.
You think savings and investment are security, but they are not because the basis of our entire economy is a figment of imagination, a creation based only in faith, and that faith is in a global Ponzi scheme that is tenuous at best.
I'm sorry you have such a sad life that you have to tell lies about me to make yourself more impressive.
One of the beautiful things about this country is that we can speak about those things we so desire. Seems like your panties are a bit out of alignment. Maybe the government can assist you with that as well.I'll worry just plenty about my needs, why don't you tend to yours and shut the **** up about mine.
A lot like your posts.Financial advice is as worthless as the money it's about.
Money is good, but it isn't failsafe. It can be taken away easy enough. Isolating yourself and never sleeping so you can guard your pot of gold is going to be miserable and fail. Besides health is the only wealth worth anything.
That might be sort of true, but when I have to go to the Doctor for anything serious, I am sort of happy that I have managed to accumulate a small amount of worth to trade for the services of the physician.Money is good, but it isn't failsafe. It can be taken away easy enough. Isolating yourself and never sleeping so you can guard your pot of gold is going to be miserable and fail. Besides health is the only wealth worth anything. .
That might be sort of true, but when I have to go to the Doctor for anything serious, I am sort of happy that I have managed to accumulate a small amount of worth to trade for the services of the physician.
OK, you have seen both sides. Which would you prefer; to have some wealth to pay for medical care, or not.I find this funny. For I saved my whole life. Then the wife becomes ill, then I become ill. Jump forward 15 years the wife is better I am not. In this time we loose all our saving and become homeless do to medical bills and everything that goes with them.
So that wealth you secured can be taken from you in a matter of a few years if your health never gets better and you are not able to work any longer. What happens, you loose your insurance then go broke. They will take every penny you have saved. Ones health or lack of should not make a family go broke and become homeless. But it happens all the time in America.
Tony
OK, you have seen both sides. Which would you prefer; to have some wealth to pay for medical care, or not.
Not needing the medical care is the only way to win. Being able to pay for it is at best second place.
Not needing the medical care is the only way to win. Being able to pay for it is at best second place.
OK, you have seen both sides. Which would you prefer; to have some wealth to pay for medical care, or not.