Oct 18, 2015
Near Anti-Aging therapies could be U.S. money solution to Soc Sec
The research has advanced and is 5 to 10 years within our grasp to have human trials prove as in animals already that organs can be renewed and longevity increased. The utility may be upon us possibly before Social Security trust fund is currently estimated to be dry. Tweakings applied to SS are band aids. Anti aging therapies address the problem head on as a solution. Tweaking is necessary to sustain SS long enough to allow the full benefit of this therapy and development of its breadth and scope to manifest after the currently scheduled estimate of the dry well year is upon us. Even having SS payments to individuals living 12 years longer, lets say like animals have, longevity may not be a new money problem considering the degree of up front savings to first prevent further tweaks to SS and add longevity for SS itself. Competent legislators by then will have had their come to Jesus moment once, and they or their replacements can have another opportunity to work out a solution before another crisis occurs. [ I hear your cynicism already about a "second chance" ]
Keeping people healthier in their old age is huge beyond what you may imagine for savings from not having to address exceptionally costly health issues of the aged. Current advancement in anti aging and those on the near horizon show potential solution via anti aging. The savings that can be realized can be meaningfully significant to address the following problem adequately:
"The United States government is borrowing 30 cents of every dollar it spends already, which happens to be almost the exact percentage of the budget that flows to the aged in the form of Social Security, Medicare, and other transfer payments. The trends that have created this problem, however, are accelerating as the population of transfer-payment recipients grows older and bigger due to increases in lifespans. Simultaneously, of course, the population of younger payers into the system is shrinking along with birth rates." [source identified below]
This subject had been out there tangential to my interest. Now it can be very big in all of our minds if everyone reads this essay just published. I didn't find the subject dry, and it got more interesting as the reading went along, not to mention investment opportunities. One can within a few minutes get insight into this rapidly advancing therapy by reading this, suggesting to me that by doing so won't have you ever forgetting the powerful significance of the subject and its quickly evolving solutions moving from the edge to the center of the radar screen. AND [ I am not a promoter ] there is a channel for investment due diligence help into something that no longer one has to hope for.....Public companies are in place now with transparency and excitement for the future. I am a trader, not an investor, but this one pushed my hot button.
Because this came as part of a newsletter received by email, I had to do a SEARCH to give you a direct link.
http://www.mauldineconomics.com/economic-analysis
or http://www.mauldineconomics.com/frontlinethoughts/the-age-age
Near Anti-Aging therapies could be U.S. money solution to Soc Sec
The research has advanced and is 5 to 10 years within our grasp to have human trials prove as in animals already that organs can be renewed and longevity increased. The utility may be upon us possibly before Social Security trust fund is currently estimated to be dry. Tweakings applied to SS are band aids. Anti aging therapies address the problem head on as a solution. Tweaking is necessary to sustain SS long enough to allow the full benefit of this therapy and development of its breadth and scope to manifest after the currently scheduled estimate of the dry well year is upon us. Even having SS payments to individuals living 12 years longer, lets say like animals have, longevity may not be a new money problem considering the degree of up front savings to first prevent further tweaks to SS and add longevity for SS itself. Competent legislators by then will have had their come to Jesus moment once, and they or their replacements can have another opportunity to work out a solution before another crisis occurs. [ I hear your cynicism already about a "second chance" ]
Keeping people healthier in their old age is huge beyond what you may imagine for savings from not having to address exceptionally costly health issues of the aged. Current advancement in anti aging and those on the near horizon show potential solution via anti aging. The savings that can be realized can be meaningfully significant to address the following problem adequately:
"The United States government is borrowing 30 cents of every dollar it spends already, which happens to be almost the exact percentage of the budget that flows to the aged in the form of Social Security, Medicare, and other transfer payments. The trends that have created this problem, however, are accelerating as the population of transfer-payment recipients grows older and bigger due to increases in lifespans. Simultaneously, of course, the population of younger payers into the system is shrinking along with birth rates." [source identified below]
This subject had been out there tangential to my interest. Now it can be very big in all of our minds if everyone reads this essay just published. I didn't find the subject dry, and it got more interesting as the reading went along, not to mention investment opportunities. One can within a few minutes get insight into this rapidly advancing therapy by reading this, suggesting to me that by doing so won't have you ever forgetting the powerful significance of the subject and its quickly evolving solutions moving from the edge to the center of the radar screen. AND [ I am not a promoter ] there is a channel for investment due diligence help into something that no longer one has to hope for.....Public companies are in place now with transparency and excitement for the future. I am a trader, not an investor, but this one pushed my hot button.
Because this came as part of a newsletter received by email, I had to do a SEARCH to give you a direct link.
http://www.mauldineconomics.com/economic-analysis
or http://www.mauldineconomics.com/frontlinethoughts/the-age-age