As typical, in your dyspeptic zeal to be disagreeable, you totally distort the actual situation to knock down another phantom. The plan you do offer basically is to finance existing credit card debt by applying for a new credit card, so that you can take cash advances from the new credit card to make minimum monthly payments on existing credit card debt. I thought you would be smart enough to realize that just does not work.
The issue is whether to switch from defined benefit plan to defined contribution plan, not to stop offering all retirement benefits entirely. so drop your poutrage on that score. and please, let us know of any private-sector employer that still offers a defined benefit pension plan to new hires. What's that you say? nothing? uh huh....
You also are woefully deficient as an actuary.
It is a very common practice in state governments to have multiple pension tiers: the level of pension benefits have routinely been adjusted for decades by walling off one class of people as "Tier 1" and having everyone after them be "Tier 2." etc. Connecticut currently has four different pension tiers depending upon hire date and years of service, for example. The proposal is nothing new, it is just another shift from overly-generous benefits to benefits that can be financed in an affordable manner. Who wins if the state cannot pay any pensions to anyone? ask the municipal retirees of Central Falls, RI about how well that has worked out for them!
The longer a person works, the higher their pension reserves need to be on three different measures, and so the effect is to multiply the deficit exponentially, it does not increase in additive fashion.
-- a typical defined benefit pension is final salary times a factor related to years of service
-- each additional year a person works, the higher their salary gets
-- each additional year a person works, the higher the years of service multiple becomes
-- each additional year a person works, the longer their remaining life expectancy becomes