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body It's like the chain-smoking parent scolding his or her children about cigarettes. It's an act that people today might call "ironic," continuing the societal penchant for misusing that word. Or that others might more accurately identify as hypocrisy.

But whatever you choose to call this particular act I'm referring to here, the headline alone -- from Ron Lieber's piece in the New York Times about it -- says it all: "Et Tu, AARP? Good Guys Cut 401(k)s, Too". Yes, you read that correctly. And now my ramblings and link to an Alanis Morissette video make a little more sense.

Lieber, adeptly swinging at the Titleist placed on a tee by AARP, expertly captures the essence of this story:
"Given its track record of fighting for the financial rights of retirees, it seems shocking that the organization would turn around and take from its own 2,200 or so employees what they’d hoped would be a big pile of matching money. It's almost as if the Teamsters decided to build a new national headquarters and hired nonunion labor to do it."
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Sure, this is just the latest in a string of similar such cuts made by employers in every corner of this struggling economy. Lieber mentions blue-chip companies like Xerox Corp. and Black & Decker Corp. alongside a nonprofit like PBS, just to name a few. And my colleague Renee DeFranco noted in her piece a few weeks ago that Americans have plenty of other retirement-savings problems to be worrying about.

Even with that backdrop, though, this cut stings -- for its symbolic meaning. It is a gut-punch that brings about a feeling like the one that prompted the mythical exchange where a young boy is said to have desperately asked fallen baseball star Shoeless Joe Jackson, on trial for helping his team intentionally lose the World Series, "Say it ain't so, Joe?"

But in fairness, as Lieber's Times piece goes on to note, AARP does still offer an old-fashioned pension plan, which is increasingly rare. And the organization also claims that suspending its 401(k) match actually benefits employees by keeping the organization from having to conduct further layoffs.
" 'Everyone is sharing in the burden equally,' [AARP legislative counsel and policy director David] Certner said. 'It's a tradeoff of jobs versus benefits. We're making sure people still have a job. That was our first priority.' "
Sounds reasonable enough, right? Not so fast. For an in-depth look at why AARP's logic is questionable at best and downright unfair at worst (plus a chance to role-play and figure out what all of this could mean for you), browse on over to the New York Times for Lieber's spot-on analysis.

What do you think of AARP's decision to suspend its 401(k) match? Has your employer made this or any other benefits cutbacks to combat the recession?

Message Edited by Anthony_Catalano on 07-13-2009 02:28 PM
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  • comment number 10
  • date 07-06-2009 04:50 PM
  • author 4whatitsworth writes:
body I'm glad I have not renewed my membership with AARP. When they were supporting this global warming myth, hook line and sinker, I decided I didn't want to be a part of it anymore. I think it was great when it first started, but now it's too leftist for me.
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  • comment number 11
  • date 07-06-2009 06:24 PM
  • author radar writes:
body When I retired a couple of months ago, I considered myself fortunate that I had a better than average pension plus a 401k. Even so, I felt it prudent to look for areas were I could still cut expenses. AARP is near the top of the "cut" list, since I can't find a single benefit worth the membership fee.
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  • comment number 12
  • date 07-06-2009 07:13 PM
  • author jamesawalker writes:
body The AARP by reducing promised benefits to its
employees has given an amoral mantra to all
corporations to "save jobs" no matter what employees
must sacrifice. In all market conditions a corporation's
goal is to reduce labor costs whether the adverse conditions are real or imagined. In the current time
such headlines are made possible by the lack of a presence of organized labor within the work place that can question whether such cuts are really the best
alternative or an easy solution for strained talent in
management positions during difficult times.
Even the bailed out companys distributed extras to
employees to maintain them if they were to have a hope
of prospering in the future. So no one should have
to feel simply grateful to have a job when they are the true wealth of the corporations for which they are
employed.
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  • comment number 13
  • date 07-06-2009 07:30 PM
  • author anmar68 writes:
body Everyone should drop AARP !!!!
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  • comment number 14
  • date 07-06-2009 08:07 PM
  • author jazzmon1951 writes:
body The company I work for has had to make many hard decisions about how to deal with the poor business condition we have, by reducing work weeks, adding furlough's, announcing pay cuts as well as lay offs. It's all part of the current economic mess we are living with.

To add a comment about our congress and legislation it passes, mentioned by one of the other bloggers. I heard it mentioned once that rarly do our legislator's go back a year or two after passing legislation to see if it worked as it was intended to work. All that ever seem's to happen is more legislation passed with no reconciliation for improvement.
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body “liberals,progressives,socialists and any of that ilk “????? Shirley you jest!! Since the advent of Reaganomics, wherein all of this “once great nations” wealth was systematically transferred to the very top of the wealthy and corporate class, organizations like the AARP have just been trying to hold the once thought of as political center. How many more of our citizens have to end up on minimum wage (read that starvation wage)? 401k’s represent one way to save for the future, but society funded programs funded by taxes on wealth should be a firm foundation that we can count on. It’s what separates civilized societies from uncivilized ones.
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  • comment number 16
  • date 07-07-2009 03:04 AM
  • author charleybrown2 writes:
body my personal opinion is we have (535) clowns in that circus
in washinton,dc and they collectively do not have enough
intelligence to pour rain out of a boot even if the directions
were on the heel. as far as the aarp is concerned where were these clowns when the powers to be were setting
the price fixing on the drugs retirees,the one that was
negoiating the drug prices went work for the drug people and this you can check on cspan senator waxman is on tape about this fraud,also with 35million
retirees why didn't aarp use this amount of clout to get
better drug prices for us,thank's
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  • comment number 17
  • date 07-07-2009 03:00 PM
  • author pittsburghray writes:
body AARP should be trying to get retirees the same health care benefits WALFARE PEOPLE GET. Our older population of workers just keep getting smacked in the face because they chose to work instead of relying on the "system". Down with welfare the Government will save billions.
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  • comment number 18
  • date 07-07-2009 03:19 PM
  • author Frisbeeredcat writes:
body For your information retirees have Medicare, what is WALFARE? There are millions of people out of work right now that cannot find jobs, period. AARP is a good organization, if not for them ex-pres Bush would have had SS money in the stock markets and that would have been a total disaster, as more than half would have been lost to the greedy bankers schemes. AARP was instrumental in saving SS! They are not responsible for the doughnut hole in the prescription drug bill. Talk to your bought and sold Congress people about that, AARP is a major reason seniors have a drug option AT ALL for Medciare. Also they are fighting for health care for all Americans. This is essential if this country is to survive. Companies can't afford to pay for employee plans. Look what happened to GM and Chrysler. I have been through this system. I had good insurance but lost it when I was too sick to work, then 18 months on COBRA, then the Texas Risk Pool, then no insurance co. would cover me due to pre-existing conditions. 70% of bankriptcies are due to medical bills and these are people that have insurance. The system is broken. Try to pay for care yourself with cash, all you people that think the government is the problem! You won't be around for long! See ya!
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  • comment number 19
  • date 07-07-2009 03:53 PM
  • author Innana writes:
body I'm not surprised at the duplicity of the policies of AARP. After nearly 20 yrs as members, I declined to rejoin a few years ago. Not only has the organization become increasingly leftist in their approach, they seem to have no idea of how middle class America lives and works. The final straw was when I received a Modern Maturity magazine that displayed clothing outfits for the well-dressed man and woman of a certain age. The outfits ranged from about $700.00 to over $1,000.00 PER outfit..regular clothes and not evening dress. That's when I realized how much out of touch the magazine and their parent organization-AARP-was with middle America. My husband(1937) and I(1940) were "war" babies and I really feel for my youngest sibling (1950) who is in the "baby-boomer" generation as it will be difficult for these folks to retire as early as we did. SAD.
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