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英語世界文摘:How Retirement Was Invented

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2021年04月12日

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How Retirement Was Invented

退休制度之誕生

By Sarah Laskow

文/莎拉·拉斯科夫

The earliest schemes for financial support in old age were pegged[1] to life expectancy.

對老年人的財政支持制度最早與預(yù)期壽命掛鉤。

[1] peg使工資、價格等固定于某水平(或與……掛鉤)。

In 1881 Otto von Bismarck[2], the conservative minister president of Prussia, presented a radical idea to the Reichstag[3]: government-run financial support for older members of society. In other words, retirement. The idea was radical because back then, people simply did not retire. If you were alive, you worked – probably on a farm – or, if you were wealthier, managed a farm or larger estate.

1881年,時任普魯士首相的保守派奧托·馮·俾斯麥向德意志帝國議會提議,由政府出資對老年人提供財政支持,即建立退休制度。這是一個全新的理念,因為當(dāng)時根本沒有退休一說。活著,就要工作——一般人很可能是干農(nóng)活兒——家境富裕的人,就是管理農(nóng)場或大莊園。

[2] 德意志帝國首任首相(1871—1890),人稱“鐵血首相”(德語:Eiserner Kanzler;“鐵”指武器,“血”指戰(zhàn)爭)、“德國的建筑師”及“德國的領(lǐng)航員”。

[3] Reichstag德意志帝國議會。

But von Bismarck was under pressure, from socialist opponents, to do better by the people in his country, and so he argued to the Reichstag that “those who are disabled from work by age and invalidity have a well-grounded claim to care from the state.” It would take eight years, but by the end of the decade, the German government would create a retirement system, which provided for citizens over the age of 70 – if they lived that long.

反對派社會黨人向俾斯麥?zhǔn)海卮倨渥尡緡鴩裆罡?,因而他在德意志帝國議會上主張,稱“年老傷殘無法工作者有充分理由享受國家的照顧”。原本計劃用八年推行,但直到第十年末,德國政府才設(shè)立了退休制度,僅面向70歲以上的公民——只要能活到這個歲數(shù),就可以退休。

This was a big “if,” at the time. That retirement age just about aligned with life expectancy in Germany then. Even with retirement, most people still worked until they died.

然而,這是一個大大的假設(shè),因為70歲差不多就是當(dāng)時德國人的預(yù)期壽命。即便有了退休制度,大多數(shù)人還是工作到生命終點。

There were exceptions though. Military pensions had long been given to soldiers who had risked their lives (though those pensions didn’t necessarily mean they could stop working altogether). In the United States, starting in the mid-1800s, certain municipal employees – firefighters, cops, teachers, mostly in big cities – started receiving public pensions, too, and in 1875, the American Express Company started offering private pensions. By the 1920s, a variety of American industries, from railroads to oil to banking, were promising their workers some sort of support for their later years.

當(dāng)然也有例外。從很早以前開始,曾冒生命危險保家衛(wèi)國的軍人可領(lǐng)取軍人退休金(不過領(lǐng)退休金不代表他們完全不用工作)。19世紀(jì)中葉起,部分美國市政雇員,如消防員、警察、教師也開始領(lǐng)取公共養(yǎng)老金,不過主要限于大城市。1875年,美國運通公司開始為其員工提供企業(yè)養(yǎng)老金。20世紀(jì)20年代,鐵路、石油、銀行等美國各大行業(yè)均承諾為員工在晚年提供一定的資助。

Most of these pension programs pegged the retirement age to 65. This mark had less to do with health and more with economics – workers could keep on trucking[4] for years, and “old age” didn’t necessarily mean bad health. (There was some research, however, that documented a decline in mental capabilities starting around age 60. Conventional wisdom held, too, that by 60 a man had certainly done his best work and should give way to the next generation.) When the federal government started creating what would become social security, some of the policies suggested would have had workers off the clock at 60, or even earlier. The economics of that didn’t quite work, though, and so when the Social Security Act was passed in 1935, the official retirement age was 65. Life expectancy for American men was around 58 at the time.

這些養(yǎng)老金制度大多都將退休年齡設(shè)定在了65歲。這一數(shù)字和身體健康程度不再有太大關(guān)系,而更多和經(jīng)濟(jì)掛鉤——年紀(jì)大的工人再干幾年沒問題,“年老”也并不意味著身體不好。(然而一些研究表明,人的智力大概到60歲便開始退化。傳統(tǒng)觀念也認(rèn)為人到60,該功成身退、讓位給下一代了。)后來聯(lián)邦政府開始建立社會保障體系,有人提議將退休年齡設(shè)定為60歲甚至更早。不過這一提議沒有經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)意義,1935年通過的《社會保障法》中,正式退休年齡仍為65歲。當(dāng)時美國男性的預(yù)期壽命約為58歲。

[4] truck〈非正式〉緩慢前進(jìn)。

Almost immediately after that, though, that balance changed. The Depression ended, and wealth and better medicine meant that in the post-war boom, Americans started to live longer. By 1960, life expectancy in America was almost 70 years. All of a sudden more people were living past the age where they had permission to stop working and the money to do it. Finally, they began to retire in large numbers – to stop working, to embrace leisure, to golf. For a few decades, older Americans lived without working, enough that we’ve come to expect that we should be able to retire, even if that may no longer be financially possible for many. Today, the Social Security Administration estimates that there are 38 million retired people in the United States alone.

沒過多久,這種平衡便被打破。大蕭條結(jié)束后,戰(zhàn)后繁榮時期社會越發(fā)富裕,醫(yī)療得到改善,美國人平均壽命開始提高,20世紀(jì)60年代,美國人預(yù)期壽命近70歲。轉(zhuǎn)眼間,更多人活過了退休年齡,不僅可以不工作,經(jīng)濟(jì)上也有保障。最終,越來越多的人退休——不用工作,享受閑暇,打打高爾夫。接下來數(shù)十年,美國老年人都過著悠哉的退休生活,讓人覺得到一定年齡就退休是天經(jīng)地義的,即便對很多人來說不再有那個經(jīng)濟(jì)基礎(chǔ)。今天,美國社會保障管理局估計僅美國就有3800萬退休人員。

(譯者單位:中南大學(xué))


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