I think a lot of the people sticking around at one job are the ones with pensions.
You need portable pension plans that move with you job to job and accumulate nonetheless, as we have in the Netherlands
In the US, people working up through the late nineties got pensions specific to whatever company an employee works for. Now there just aren’t pensions for any workers.
But hey at least they came up with this brilliant retirement plan where you can gamble your salary on the stock market instead /s
I’m confused as to how that works. Different pensions can promise different benefits. How does that work when switching jobs?
I am not sure about the Netherlands but where I am you have superannuation which is completely independent from your job and you control who it’s with yourself. When you change jobs you just let your new employer know where to send your contributions to.
We don’t rely on super/pensions for benefits before retirement age and have universal health care too.
Where I live, it is mandatory for employers to start a pension scheme for all employees. The scheme is controlled by the employer until you quit. Then it is up to you to find it a good home and make sound investing strategies. You can’t access the money until your are at least 62 years old.
If you find a new job, your new employer will assume responsibility over it and make sure payments are made into it on your behalf until you quit/retire.
Mandatory monthly payments your employer have to make are minimum 2 % and up to a maximum of 7% of your salary.
It is a part of your terms and conditions when you apply for a job. The employer can’t take the percentage out of your salary. They have to take it from the business itself.