Comprehensive Retirement Reform and Employment: Vermont : Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Retirement Income and Employment of the Select Committee on Aging, House of Representatives, Ninety-seventh Congress, Second Session, June 11, 1982, Woodstock, VtU.S. Government Printing Office, 1982 - 157 pages |
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Page 9
... talking about the proposals which would have the retirement age work gradually up to 68 so that in the year 2000 it would be 68 ? Is that what you are talking about ? Mr. MYERS . That is the general thing I was referring to . Most of ...
... talking about the proposals which would have the retirement age work gradually up to 68 so that in the year 2000 it would be 68 ? Is that what you are talking about ? Mr. MYERS . That is the general thing I was referring to . Most of ...
Page 10
... talking about in the next 5 or 6 years if there is no adjustment to the plan ? Mr. MYERS . The shortfall , again depending very much on eco- nomic conditions , could be I think under the intermediate esti- mates , it runs perhaps ...
... talking about in the next 5 or 6 years if there is no adjustment to the plan ? Mr. MYERS . The shortfall , again depending very much on eco- nomic conditions , could be I think under the intermediate esti- mates , it runs perhaps ...
Page 11
... talking about here ? Mr. MYERS . This was just a generality . I am not sure this is going to happen . It just seems this would be very likely . I would say by people approaching retirement age , I would mean those reaching age 65 in the ...
... talking about here ? Mr. MYERS . This was just a generality . I am not sure this is going to happen . It just seems this would be very likely . I would say by people approaching retirement age , I would mean those reaching age 65 in the ...
Page 19
... talking about . There have always been enough people in all walks of life throw- ing doubts and roadblocks in the way . Very few , including the Con- gress of the United States - I think one administration after an- other has been ...
... talking about . There have always been enough people in all walks of life throw- ing doubts and roadblocks in the way . Very few , including the Con- gress of the United States - I think one administration after an- other has been ...
Page 20
... talked to about 37 or 38 senior groups made up of , in numbers , maybe 45 to 130 senior citizens , that came to meet- ings that they called for and asked our panel to address the ques- tion of " medi - gap , " so - called , covering ...
... talked to about 37 or 38 senior groups made up of , in numbers , maybe 45 to 130 senior citizens , that came to meet- ings that they called for and asked our panel to address the ques- tion of " medi - gap , " so - called , covering ...
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administration appreciate believe bill Bob Kingsley budget Chairman Commission concerned Conference on Aging Congress contributions cost Council of Senior coverage dollars earnings economic elderly employees ERISA Federal feel future going Government GREGG Hampshire hearing HOWRIGAN incentives increase individual retirement accounts inflation investment issue JUDD GREGG legislation living look medicaid Medicare ment million MYERS National Older Americans Older Americans Act older persons older workers panel participants pension system percent poverty line present President private pension plans private plans private sector problem proposals receive Representative retirement age retirement income retirement plan revenues rity savings secu Senate senior citizens Senior Community Services SEP-IRA's small employers Social Security Administration Social Security benefits social security system STATEMENT talking Thank thing tion trust funds Vermont wage White House Conference Windsor County
Fréquemment cités
Page 45 - The subcommittee will stand in recess until 1. (Whereupon, at 12 noon, the subcommittee recessed, to reconvene at 1 pm, the same day.) AFTERNOON SESSION (The subcommittee reconvened at 1:10 pm, Senator Walter F.
Page 94 - Even though the operations of the Social Security trust funds are combined with the general operations of the Federal government in the unified Federal budget, policy decisions affecting the Social Security program should be based on the objectives of the program rather than on any effect that such decisions might have on the Federal budget.
Page 90 - The fact that the worker pays a substantial share of the cost of the benefits provided, in a way visible to all, is his assurance that he and his dependents will receive the scheduled benefits and that they will be paid as a matter of right without the necessity of establishing need. The contribution sets the tone of the program and its administration by making clear that this is not a program of government aid given to the individual, but rather a cooperative program in which the people use the...
Page 152 - The Subcommittee on Retirement Income and Employment of the House Select Committee on Aging will come to order.
Page 134 - Throughout its history its purpose has been to work for the achievement by peaceful means of those political, economic, social, and psychological conditions throughout the world which can assure peace and freedom.
Page 32 - Job Performance of Federal Mail Sorters by Age," Monthly Labor Review, March 1964, pp. 296-300. 2. There is no specific age at which employees become unproductive. Satisfactory work performance may continue into the eighth decade. 3. Supervisors believe that a majority of their older workers have no apparent and specific age-connected weaknesses. A 1972 study related job performance and test scores for a group of 266 female clerical workers, 34 percent aged 25 or under and 35 percent aged 50 or more....
Page 21 - The only thing they had in common was the fact that they were 'New Wave,' with a large size and a new sensibility. So whether it was fashion, architecture, art, or politics, they sat next to each other on the newsstand. Whatever vestigial marketing sense I had said that if we did comics as a large-size thing, they could sit next to the architecture magazines...
Page 151 - First it was considered to be by most people an attempt by the government to help them manage to keep a roof over their heads, food on the table and clothes on their backs in their over 65 years.
Page 118 - HON. NICHOLAS JOHNSON, THE MARITIME ADMINISTRATOR Mr. JOHNSON. No, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman, as Maritime Administrator I would like to express my appreciation to you for holding these hearings and giving me an opportunity to appear. The American merchant marine has made substantial contributions to our national welfare since the beginnings of this great Nation. It is now contributing very heavily to our efforts in South Vietnam, as your hearings have so well demonstrated. It has the potential...
Page 130 - tis nobler in the mind to suffer The flings and arrows of outrageous fortune — Or to take arms against a sea of trouble ; And, by opposing end them?