Klaus Schwab = Great Reset is really the only way
Explained:
Pension reform has no solution.
It is an unsolvable equation.
People cannot save for pensions in the auxiliary pillars because they do not earn enough money for their lives. Money cannot be generated by investing either, the collapse of US pension investment funds in the US in 2009 (funds established under federal tax law under Chapter 401k for pension investment) showed a catastrophe of what will happen to pension funds and their returns when stock markets fail.
Millions of Americans lost their retirement pensions within hours. So retirement savings are not the way to go, this can only apply to a small group of high-income families and individuals. And the second option of the solidarity pension system leads, for a change, to a huge indebtedness of the state, which from year to year has more problems feeding a huge army of pensioners, who live on average up to 17 years more than in 1989.
So how can this equation be circumvented if it cannot be solved? The only solution is to abolish private ownership. Klaus Schwab, the head of the World Economic Forum, writes about this issue in his book on the 4th Industrial Revolution, where he rightly evaluates the issue of pensions as unsolvable. In order for the pension savings option to work, people would have to start paying much higher salaries. This would raise the prices of goods and services and turn the inflationary spiral. And continuing a solidarity-based pension system would require two things, maintaining a high birth rate at a rate of more than 2.85 offspring per family, but requiring the provision of resources and raw materials for their adult employment and housing.