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Life On Severance Pay Comfort Then Crisis

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Life On Severance Pay Comfort Then Crisis

Unread postby Revi » Sun 15 Nov 2009, 09:33:45

I think the time to scale back is before you lose your job. It's painful, but if you do it now, it will pay off in case it happens. We have one solid paycheck, and it it evaporated we could live on very little.

It wouldn't be any fun, but we could do it. I think...
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Re: Life On Severance Pay Comfort Then Crisis

Unread postby Falconoffury » Sun 15 Nov 2009, 13:10:22

The guy in the article says that the day of reckoning will come in 6 months, with $200,000 severance pay and $100,000 savings. I urge everyone to not feel sorry for this guy. He should be making adjustments to push this day of reckoning back about 5 years.

I sure wish I could have lived in that guy's generation to have an opportunity for one of those high paying jobs. I'm young, and even college educated young people aren't offered anywhere near this kind of salary. Since the start of the recession, young people are relegated to jobs not even requiring college, if they work at all. I have a decent job now, but I don't know if my employer's company will survive 2010.
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Re: Life On Severance Pay Comfort Then Crisis

Unread postby drew » Sun 15 Nov 2009, 18:00:36

Wow, an article about a bunch of folks originally making 5 maybe 6 times what I make. They send their kid to private school, and drive beemers. It is very hard for me to feel sorry for them.
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Re: Life On Severance Pay Comfort Then Crisis

Unread postby shortonsense » Sun 15 Nov 2009, 19:38:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('drew', 'W')ow, an article about a bunch of folks originally making 5 maybe 6 times what I make. They send their kid to private school, and drive beemers. It is very hard for me to feel sorry for them.


I don't think any of us feels sorry for them.
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Re: Life On Severance Pay Comfort Then Crisis

Unread postby Outcast_Searcher » Mon 16 Nov 2009, 03:07:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('drew', 'W')ow, an article about a bunch of folks originally making 5 maybe 6 times what I make. They send their kid to private school, and drive beemers. It is very hard for me to feel sorry for them.


It's worse than that. In every example, these people had the types of jobs that implied they are well educated, so ignorance isn't a valid excuse (that excuse is often used for J6P types).

In addition, the age of all these folks, if memory serves, were in their 40's and 50's. So plenty of time to have built a career and done some serious systematic saving and investing. BUT, the best-off seemed to have a mere 6 months of salary saved they could readily access.

Really really pitiful, and really really stupid. And this is in the midst of a global financial crisis where the stories of financial danger are rife.

So highly productive, well educated people seem to have the financial acumen of the average lizard. Fabulous. No wonder we elect such foresighted and erudite politicians.
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Re: Life On Severance Pay Comfort Then Crisis

Unread postby FairMaiden » Mon 16 Nov 2009, 19:32:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Prince', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('timmac', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')From article ;

If someone takes a job that pays considerably less (likely with a lower job title and less responsibility), then he find it extremely difficult to get a company to hire him in a higher role somewhere down the road when/if the economy turns around. Companies will look at your experience and think "geez, you must have been a pretty bad ____ if your company let you go and all you could do afterward was manage a Best Buy. We'll pass." If you're in a position where you have a stable job with a good income and have a lot of visibility and knowledge, I would try to avoid taking just any job that comes along, unless you absolutely need the money to support yourself or your family, especially if you want to retain that kind of prowess that you once enjoyed somewhere down the line.



I've seen this argument on here a number of times and it is hogwash. Just because you take a job for 6 months doesn't mean you HAVE to put it on your resume! If you don't take the job for fear of this situation than you are no worse off showing "unemployed" for 6 months - but you have the benefit of that income. I've done exactly this and had the temp/part time job offer me a promotion well beyond my last experience. There are also part time jobs that don't need to be declared on your resume which go a long way (with cut spending) to stretch out the savings.

The guy just shows you how silly people at the top are...companies lose money and it is no big deal. You are living off savings and you go on vacation, sounds just like the bank that layed him off. There is also a thing called "spin"...I have actually used this line, "I took a lower level position at the non-profit because I wanted to make a real difference in people's lives - I wanted to do something that MATTERED. I have since realized I can do that AND offer my family a decent life."
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