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JAZ's avatar

So seriously….. people get into the sex worker trade because of their father????

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Ernest's avatar

"while local governments limit demand through zoning restrictions" Do you mean limit supply? I think there has been lots of demand, but local zoning condes limit how much affordable housing can be built.

Regarding Target Date funds, I think the biggest challenge is that the financial industry has put almost no effort into thinking about how people should invest and spend money in retirement, other than figuring out how to extract fees from them. Bill Bengen identified the sequence of returns risk in 1994. More recent work has been looking at dynamic spending models and idenitfying things like the "spending smile" where retirees spend a lot early on, spend less as they age, and then often spend more when they need help or have medical challenges in later years.

Personally, as we get close to retirement I am trying to make sure we have a fair amount of low-risk money available to cover things like delaying Social Security and managing sequence of returns risk in the first 5 years. But after that, the money needs to be allocated so there is real growth potential to fund another 20-30 years. That requires assets with a mix of durations to provide some certainty of what you can pull out this year and next year but still ahve something to pull out 25 years later. That requires matching different assets to different time frames. You can actually do that with Target Date funds by not thinking about the target date as the date for retirement, but instead looking at the glide path to see how it matches growth and spending time frames. So an account could potentially have several TDs with different target dates for different duration buckets.

Regarding risk - the US deregulated finance and then made it almost impossble to convict white collar crooks by requiring both the fraud or theft be shown and then also requiring proof that they did that intentionally. Poor people go to jail because the bag of cocaine is in the trunk of the car they are in - no intent needs to be shown, mere proof that it exists and could be deemed to be in their possession. Far fewer of them would go to jail if the required burden of proof matched white collar crime.

So we need basic regulation guardrails to provide large financial sector actors from blowing up and then make it easier to convict people who commit fraud, etc. Bail out the companies if they are systemtically important and then throw the executives in jail. There will be much less fraud and instability in the future. Bill Black referred over a thousand of people for prosecution in the S&L crisis and many of them went to jail. Just about the only white collar people who have gone to jail in the past 20 years were Martha Stewart and Michael Cohen. I don't count Bernie Madoff because he turned himself in and confessed when he knew the checks would bounce.

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