by Larry Shultz | Feb 14, 2024 | Covid-19, Democracy, Human and Civil rights, Neuroeconomics, Public Health, Public Policy, Retirement
Hospitals Deny Immunocompromised Patients’ ADA Requests For Masks (forbes.com) We have attacked both human and civil rights for so long abroad, it is not unexpected to see the erosion here, in our face, as well. Justice is atrophying daily. Perhaps we may want to...
by Larry Shultz | Feb 14, 2024 | Behavioral Economics, Retirement
How Accurate Are Retirees’ Assessments of Their Retirement Risk? (bc.edu) 20 Cognitive Biases That Affect Risk Decision Making – SafetyRisk.net
by Larry Shultz | Feb 10, 2024 | Behavioral Economics, Cities, Climate, Democracy, Emergent Properties, Public Health, Public Policy, Retirement
America’s Most Expensive Home for Sale Hits the Market for $295 Million – WSJ Donahue invented mutual funds. Each grandchild gets a cool $1 million at 18 or 21. I have been by there numerous times on a boat and just walking to the south end of the sparkling...
by Larry Shultz | Feb 9, 2024 | Retirement
42% do not have a retirement account, but of those who do: For middle-income Americans, those in the 40th to 60th percentile by income, the median retirement plan held just $39,000 Note currently it takes about $100,000 to buy an single payment non deferred annuity at...
by Larry Shultz | Feb 8, 2024 | Behavioral Economics, Pensions and Annuities, Social Security
Social Security Claiming Decisions: Survey Evidence (nber.org)
by Larry Shultz | Feb 7, 2024 | Pensions and Annuities, Retirement
Supporting-Document-To-Rolling-The-DICE-How-Did-We-Get-Here.pdf (carbontracker.org)