Younger Workers Not Prepared for Hard Times Ahead, Warns
Personal Finance Expert Gene Jolley
February 12, 2004
GROTON, VT -- And so it begins. While Baby Boomers are
preparing to begin drawing on Social Security and corporate
retirement benefits in record numbers, younger workers are
saving less and borrowing more than ever. At the same time,
corporations are already cutting back on pay, benefits and
jobs in attempts to fund a projected 75 million new
retirees’ benefits over the next fifteen years and stay
competitive in a changing world economy.
It adds up to a bleak financial future for today’s working
middle class. As interest rates rise, families taking on as
much debt as they can handle right now will soon find
themselves paying credit card companies more than they can
afford. Savings will likely dwindle further, and money for
necessities like health insurance and reliable
transportation will be even tighter. Forget the one-income
family: many parents will be working more than one job just
to keep the creditors at bay and food on the table.
Those are the grim predictions of personal finance expert
Gene Jolley, whose company, Kingdom Financial Principles,
LLC provides tools, training and information to people
trying to rid themselves of debt. But Jolley is determined
to start a grass-roots effort to help educate people on the
dangers of debt and the looming financial crisis younger
workers are facing.
“People in their twenties and thirties can no longer depend
on having the same benefits or pay as the Baby Boomers have
enjoyed,” Jolley stresses. “The working poor are so busy
living paycheck to paycheck, trying to keep their heads
above water and desperately struggling to keep their
families strong and connected, they don't realize they are
just giving away any future they could have to very greedy
creditors. It can all turn around, but there has to be an
awakening in the working middle class before it is too
late.”
To that end, Jolley has launched an all-out attack on the
credit industry, cautioning consumers about the real cost of
debt and teaching people from all walks of life how to
budget, pay off debt for good and start saving. His Web
site, www.SoLongBills.com, is full of articles about the
problem of debt, tips on turning the financial tide around,
warnings about shady debt consolidation companies, and
personal financial planning how-to’s. Jolley’s Money Matters
newsletter and regular press releases serve as an outreach
to people struggling with debt.
“Not so long ago, I was on the other side of the fence. I
know how it feels to be downsized out of a job and lose your
home,” Jolley says. “And I also know what freedom there is
once you stop living above your means. Now I want to help
others do the same thing. The future can hold financial
security for today’s working middle class if they start
working toward it now.”
CONTACT:
Gene Jolley
Kingdom Financial Principles, LLC
877-341-3586
gene@solongbills.com
http://www.solongbills.com
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