John Deere strike imminent?

1UNI2ISU

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Jan 30, 2013
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I was thinking it it was darn near $20/hr from some of the help wanted things I saw in the paper but maybe I'm imagining that.

It is if you have 5 years assembly experience or come from a Deere contractor (i.e. Volt)(They also intentionally exclude Tyson) but if you just come off the street and get a foundry or line job it's $18.XX.
 
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2forISU

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Oct 8, 2008
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They are. They just have to managed and hedged correctly. There are a couple large companies in Des Moines proving that as we speak. They are buying these pension funds and making a killing on them in excess of what the liabilities are.
Less than 20% of all Fortune 500 companies have a pension anymore and that % has dropped by 8% since 2013. Most large Pharma companies still offer it for now. Companies don't want to take on that risk of pensions and rather offset it with a 401K.
 

ISUCyclones2015

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Less than 20% of all Fortune 500 companies have a pension anymore and that % has dropped by 8% since 2013. Most large Pharma companies still offer it for now. Companies don't want to take on that risk of pensions and rather offset it with a 401K.

Here let me fix this for you:

It's cheaper to offer a 401k than pension.

Boom that's the entire reason.
 

JBone84

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Nov 30, 2006
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This remains the absolute dumbest argument people can make. Nobody says the CEO should make nothing. The other part is you are ignoring all the other executives that also make to much money.


Executives deserve to be compensated well based on the stress and challenges they have to deal with. What they don’t need is as much as they get.

This is the problem with how all companies are run in this day and age. Executives are incentivized to increase the value of their stock price not the value of their company. Businesses are short sighted to only what is best for the next quarter instead of the next 5 years.

It probably isn’t as big of a deal directly with John Deere but when companies cut pay their workers can no longer afford their products which leads them to cutting costs and a vicious cycle until the company fails. I was just watching a documentary on the history channel and you saw that with Ford. When they started out they paid workers more than others so that the workers could afford a car. Then once they started cutting costs the workers couldn’t afford the cars and the company lost profitability.

By what standard?
 

BryceC

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Here let me fix this for you:

It's cheaper to offer a 401k than pension.

Boom that's the entire reason.

It's also easier to plan for - you don't need to worry about what is going to happen 50 years from now.

I know it's unpopular but I like 401k's and I think they are superior to pensions as long as people fund them. They are portable between employers, and most companies have a match and everything.
 
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ISUCyclones2015

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It's also easier to plan for - you don't need to worry about what is going to happen 50 years from now.

I know it's unpopular but I like 401k's and I think they are superior to pensions as long as people fund them. They are portable between employers, and most companies have a match and everything.

I like them too personally but my 401k matching and other benefits like the mega backdoor IRA option my employer allows along with the 401k is hard to beat
 
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spierceisu

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I like them too personally but my 401k matching and other benefits like the mega backdoor IRA option my employer allows along with the 401k is hard to beat
The problem with a pension is that when you die, the money goes away. With a 401K or IRA it can be handed down to beneficiaries (wife, kids, etc) so that makes it better in my opinion.
 

brett108

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May 1, 2010
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I know the situation. If you have a side job that makes more than the Deere job why have a Deere job in the first place?
Health insurance and 401K. I know plenty of people like this that don’t spend a dime from their corporate job and use it as retirement savings.
 

2forISU

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The problem with a pension is that when you die, the money goes away. With a 401K or IRA it can be handed down to beneficiaries (wife, kids, etc) so that makes it better in my opinion.
My dad worked 41 years at Deere, died 10 days before his retirement and my mom never saw a dime of his pension.
 
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ISUCyclones2015

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The problem with a pension is that when you die, the money goes away. With a 401K or IRA it can be handed down to beneficiaries (wife, kids, etc) so that makes it better in my opinion.

My father's pension from Firestone was able to go to his estate. It wasn't a full one since he was only there 12 years or so. Have things changed?
 

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