The Great 401(k) Hoax: What You Need to Know to Protect Your Family and Your Future

February 12, 2020 - Comment

According to business and finance journalists Bill Wolman and Anne Colamosca, the American public has been hoodwinked: 401(k)s, the most popular mechanism for retirement investing, were established to satisfy corporate, not individual, interests. They are replacing defined benefit-pension plans at an alarming rate and are vulnerable to the vicissitudes of the market, which–if history serves

Buy Now! $9.95Amazon.com Price
(as of April 20, 2020 8:18 am GMT+0000 - Details)

According to business and finance journalists Bill Wolman and Anne Colamosca, the American public has been hoodwinked: 401(k)s, the most popular mechanism for retirement investing, were established to satisfy corporate, not individual, interests. They are replacing defined benefit-pension plans at an alarming rate and are vulnerable to the vicissitudes of the market, which–if history serves as our guide–is destined for at least a decade of lackluster performance. Drawing on primary historical and contemporary data, Wolman and Colamosca build a compelling case against the 401(k) as a tool for ensuring long-term financial security. They urge individuals and families to diversify their savings and investments, building conservative portfolios that include bonds, high-dividend stocks, and savings. In the process, they explore the colorful social history of our love-hate relationship with the stock market and address many key questions facing any family today, such as: How do I accumulate enough wealth to educate my children and retire comfortably? How secure are my sources of income and how can I anticipate change? Timely and incisive, The Great 401(k) Hoax is guaranteed to inspire debate and action from the water cooler to the boardroom to the voting booth.”The 401(k) will turn out to be the greatest systemic financial hoax ever perpetrated on an unsuspecting public,” write William Wolman and Anne Colamosca in the opening pages of this book of financial muckraking. They compare this popular form of retirement planning with the Dutch tulip mania of the 17th century, the South Sea Bubble of the 18th century, and the stock-market crash of 1929–and suggest that something worse is on the horizon for people who are planning to live their golden years off the proceeds of 401(k) investing. Wrongly believing that the boom years of the 1990s were typical, “most Americans do not have the resources to ride out the bad markets of the kind that we believe will prevail for the next decade,” write Wolman (former chief economist for BusinessWeek) and Colamosca (a veteran journalist). They advise current investors to put their 401(k) money into bonds and believe companies should be banned from matching employee contributions with its own stock (a lesson they draw from the Enron debacle). The authors want even more, however: “What is needed is an FDR-style New Deal for the nation’s pension system.” The Great 401(k) Hoax is a piece of investment populism, potentially doing for the CNBC crowd what Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele did for political junkies. –John Miller

Product Features

  • Used Book in Good Condition

Comments

Anonymous says:

Good insight but The authors provided a good insight to a common employee benefit, but they failed to focus directly on the issue at hand. This issue is simple: will the assets that are accumulated in a 401K plan permit one to retire without financial difficulties?The authors failed to focus directly on the 401K both as a concept and how it is used by ordinary everyday people. They failed to note the favorable aspects that these plans [and other contributory retirement plans] have and they failed to…

Anonymous says:

You Be The Judge–Before It’s Too Late For You This book examines what the authors’ contend are the many foundational weaknesses of the 401k. Informative book, but could have used more proofing and editing. As for the “K,” one of the first to voice the cracks in it was Edward N. Wolf, and now others have hopped on the band-wagon. The creation, history, and current conditions are discussed. Many reasons are provided as to why Americans are bemused with this fund. Although the “traditional” pension is rapidly becoming…

Anonymous says:

Accurate, Relevant, Poorly Written “The Great 401(k) Hoax” offers an accurate, well-researched analysis of what has become an fallacious bit of common wisdom in the United States: that the Stock Market is a means by which average Americans can amass wealth. It is a lie, perpetrated by the US financial industry to divert funds that would have gone into traditional, safer long-term investment options like bonds, start-up businesses or real estate into mutual funds and small-investor portfolios.A part of this…

Write a comment

*