In 1880, when half of Americans worked on a
farm, 78 percent of American men
worked past age 65. ... The United
States created Social Security in 1935 and added Medicare health
benefits for the elderly in 1965. In the 1980s, many countries lowered the age
at which people could retire and
collect full benefits. See below.
A
brief history of retirement: It’s a modern idea, 12/31/13.
Work until you die —
or until you can’t work anymore.
Until the late 19th
century, that was the old-age plan for the bulk of the world’s workers.
Only in 1889 did
German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck introduce modern pensions. Bismarck wasn’t
really motivated by compassion for the plight of the working class. He wanted
to pre-empt a growing socialist movement in Germany before it grew any more
powerful.
The idea of providing
financial security for the aged gradually caught on and expanded in Europe, the
United States and other advanced economies. Now, as life expectancy reaches
lengths Bismarck couldn’t have imagined and retirement lasts two or three
decades, these countries are struggling with government pension plans they can
no longer afford.
The pension Bismarck
offered was the first to be widely available. But it was hardly the world’s
first.
In 13 B.C., the Roman
Emperor Augustus began paying pensions to Roman Legionnaires who had served 20
years. The troops’ pensions were financed at first by regular taxes, then by a
5 percent inheritance tax, according to a 2009 history by Frank Eich, an economist
now with the International Monetary Fund.
In the 16th century,
Britain and several European countries offered pensions to their troops,
starting with officers and gradually expanding to enlisted men. The first
civilian public servant known to have received a pension was an official with
the London port authority. In 1684, he was paid half his working income —
deducted from the pay of his replacement.
Thomas Paine, the
Revolutionary War firebrand famous for his essay Common Sense, called for a 10
percent inheritance tax. Part of the tax was to be used to pay benefits to
everyone age 50 and older to “guard against poverty in old age,” according to a
history by the Social Security Administration. The idea went nowhere.
After the Civil War,
the U.S. government paid pensions to disabled or impoverished Union veterans or
to the widows of the dead. Southern states paid pensions to disabled
Confederate veterans. The Civil War pensions became a basis for Social Security
decades later.
When farming dominated
the economy, most men worked as long as their health held out. As they aged,
though, they often cut their hours and turned the most physically demanding
chores over to sons or hired hands. In 1880, when half of Americans worked on a
farm, 78 percent of American men worked past age 65.
As factories began to
replace farms in economic importance, skeptics wondered whether old folks could
understand and work with the new machines. One of the giants of American
medicine, Johns Hopkins Hospital co-founder William Osler, in 1905 decried the
“uselessness” of men older than 60 and said they should leave the workforce. Growing
prosperity also meant more people could afford to stop working late in life.
In 1875, American
Express offered America’s first employer-provided retirement plan. Five years
later, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad introduced the first retirement plan,
financed jointly by contributions from an employer and its workers.
From there, private
pension plans grew. In the United States, the plans received a boost during
World War II, when the government imposed wage freezes. That led some companies
to offer pensions and other benefits to attract scarce workers.
The United States
created Social Security in 1935 and added Medicare health benefits for the elderly
in 1965. In the 1980s, many countries lowered the age at which people could
retire and collect full benefits. This step was part of an effort to clear
older workers out of the labor force to make way for the young.
Now, governments are
reversing those policies and raising retirement ages to prevent aging
populations from breaking their budgets. And older people, who now enjoy better
health, are working longer again: In the United States, 18.6 percent of people
65 and older were working or looking for work as of November. That was up from
a record-low 10.4 percent in January 1985, according to Labor Department
figures dating to 1948.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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