Breaking

Post Top Ad

Your Ad Spot

Saturday, 25 May 2019

Retirement should not mean hardship – but many older Americans live in poverty

As inequality has grown, American seniors have been exposed to financial distress in ways that often go unnoticed

Vivian Majors spent her life cleaning houses while her husband, Martin, worked as a carpenter. Their bodies broke down in their 60s. She is now 71, living on her own and struggling to pay her bills. He is in a nursing home and has Parkinson’s disease. She survives on a $960 monthly social security check and $50 in food stamps. Hardened by years of physically taxing work that left her hovering around the poverty line, Majors, now retired, is girding herself for more years of financial hardship.

Continue reading...

from The Guardian http://bit.ly/2JCcCww

Post Top Ad

Your Ad Spot