Ronald Bailey | February 25, 2004
In Congressional testimony today, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan pointed out that the first Baby Boomers will start getting social security benefits in 2008. He then declared:
"This dramatic demographic change is certain to place enormous demands on our nation's resources--demands we almost surely will be unable to meet unless action is taken. For a variety of reasons, that action is better taken as soon as possible."
In other words, Social Security and Medicare are going to go bust. OK, so Greenspan didn't actually say privatize social security, but it's the only realistic way to avoid this impending disaster.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
SS is a Ponzi scheme. It cannot possibly survive the baby-boomer
retirements coming over the next twenty years. It's also a reverse
Robin Hood program. SS robs from the poor and gives to the middle
class. How well you do under SS depends on how much you contribute,
and how long you collect. The majority of the working poor don't
live long enough to collect SS. And since the money has already
been taken from them, they can't leave it to their heirs.
Of course it should be privatized. For all your SS Qs and As go
to:
http://www.socialsecurity.org/
The idea that you could pass any reform on SS without inspiring
the wrath of the largest voting block in the country is
laughable.
The problem is that no one votes like retirees do. They have
nothing else to do with their lives. Everyone else has to work for
a living.
We'll just keep voting ourselves rich by borrowing against the
future until we reach a crisis point. This will happen when we
discover something that extends lifespan by a significant
margin.
Given the values of modern medicine, this discovery will create a
population of ancient people all living in a functional sort of
dementia laden haze. As a voting block, the 100+ demographic will
be the largest in the history of the world, will vote itself rich,
create a de facto worker slave caste of young healthy adults and
hopefully destroy itself before discovering ways to infect other
planets with its existence.
We have seen the future, and it is not very marvelousy funny in our
eyes.
Didn't we have this discussion last week?
Topics here seem to be recycled on a regular basis.
Russ says, >>>If, on that day, you are between 18 and 64, and have already paid into Social Security, you get to stop making payments and you receive a marketable, zero-coupon, inflation-adjusted, government bond that matures on your 65th birthday, with interest paid at maturity and compounded annually at LIBOR. If you want the money now, you sell the bond. Alternately, you can hold the bond, or even buy more retirement bonds from other people.
SS will never be eliminated or privatized, folks. It may crash
and go bust, but they won't kill it. Not because of the politics,
but because the gummint has been borrowing from the SS fund for
years to pay for itself. My "contribution" from this month's
paycheck goes to pay for current federal expenditure; I only
receive credit towards a future payout. Again, the money is no
longer there.
Privatizing SS in reality would do far more harm to national
finances than a flat tax, further tax cts, etc.
Just for the record, Greenspan didn't advocate privatization,
but he did explicitly suggest cutting benefits as the
solution.
For what it's worth.
Opponents of Social Security would be wise to avoid empirical
arguments -- whether about demographics, solvency, etc. -- and
stick to arguments of principle. To wit: Social Security is wrong
because it violates individual liberty.
THAT is the only argument that should be showing up in threads at a
place like Reason (besides the the posts of trolls from
elsewhere).
Ideology and principle is the exclusive tool of those who don't
have to do anything about what they're arguing for.
Don't get me wrong. Principles are really sexy. They go great with
a deskjob.
Looks like most of you are better off and smarter than I am. I'm
55 and to tell the truth I've counted on starting to draw SS at age
62. If things work out, (and they still might??) SS will be almost
half of what I have to live on. I don't think I'll feel guilty for
collecting SS, something neither of my parents lived long enough to
do.
Greenspan and some of you want me to work longer before collecting.
At what? At the rate our jobs are disappearing right now, I'm going
to be damn lucky to hold on to anything resembling gainful
employment for the next 7 years.
And please spare me the 'reinvent yourself' and 'get more
education' BS. I've been reinvented 3 times already and am in a
fairly technical information systems field now.
Saint? No, I'm not a saint, Eric, sorry to say.
However, I do recognize the danger that's inherent in arguments
that play to the other side: That is, arguing against Social
Security on empirical grounds concedes the moral ground to its
proponents. Essentially such arguments say, "Well, I'm not gonna
argue that Social Security is wrong -- I think we should
privatize/eliminate it simply because the math doesn't work." And
that, of course, places the debate into the realm of "How can we
get the math to work," rather than the realm of freedom and first
principles.
Social Security's proponents will then find a way to make the math
work, and we'll remain saddled with this liberty-infringing federal
beast. And I don't think that's what any libertarian wants.
Thus the best route is to take the debate back to 1935, and keep
the argument focused on right-and-wrong.
Russ,
I'm not quite following you. What determines the par value of the
bond you receive? Does everybody get the same one, or it is
dependent on your income or some other measure?
Since Social Security is such an arbitrary system, I guess it would
be most "fair" to give everybody the same one, right?
Thomas,
I understand, but I guess I've got a different take. It seems to me
that empirical arguments can be made in support of the principled
ones, or to counter those who reject the principled arguments.
Why is it any more of a Ponzi scheme than the military or the
highways. 1950 taxpayers pay in, 1950 recipients take out. 1982
taxpayers pay in, 1982 taxpayers take out. It's an ongoing
program.
There is going to be a pig in the python for a few years, because
of the demographic fluke of the baby boom. We legalize immigrants
and collect their payroll taxes, maybe the deficit bumps up for a
couple years, and we go on with our lives.
There's a problem to solve. It will be solved. You're all working
the crisis/panic angle for ideological reasons, not financial
ones.
I have a very old-fashioned view that people should be
responsible for their own retirements.
Is that so wrong?
The only way to truly privatize social security is to give us
our 6.2% SS tax back to us. By forcing us to keep paying in, but
giving us some control or giving others some control over that
money still amounts to government choice.
The advocates of privatization assume that the same government who
pissed away trillions through loans to that government can still be
counted on to wisely invest that money....HORSESHIT.
The only cure is surgery...gotta remove that cancer. However, for
the blind, disabled, and current elderly who qualify and collect SS
right now, Congress should keep its promise to provide SS. For the
rest of us, we should be content with the knowledge that at some
point in our future our SS taxes will be reduced to almost
nil.
In order to keep our promises, we need to contend ourselves with
the knowledge that Congress undertook a Constitutionally
permissible obligation that fucked us all...Simple fix is to amend
the Constitution to bar Congress from doint this again, or to get
another three judges on the Supreme Court who believe that
interstate commerce isn't as pervasive as Congress' thinks.
But we still need to remember that SS does help out the
disabled...not the temporarily disabled, but the truly fucked in
our society. By abolishing SS, we do a great disservice to those
who cannot work...call it a moral obligation, but at some point,
Congress should provide for or require states to provide for the
truly disabled individuals of our society who physically cannot
work.
Privatising is a good idea, and gives guys like joe a sort of
guarantee that at the end of a day the government is going to
provide him with some portion of the benefits he
expected...essential, politically, I am sure.
Also essential is to get people used to the idea that not everyone
is going to get everything they may have hoped for, and to start
reducing pay-outs by introducing a higher retirement age, and means
(wealth)- testing benefits.
The math on privatization schemes that exclude any other kinds of
reform is just too far-fetched, and raise the danger of getting the
American middle-class to see a constantly rising stock-market as
some kind of entitlement.
Poor but principled, I belive people should take care of those
in need.
I also believe that having the financial needs of retirees taken
care of provides a great deal of stability and confidence, which
increases economic activity.
I think you're wrong, but at least you're honest enough to argue
what you feel, and not make up phony financial scare stories.
Joe,
I agree that no one should stop you or I from helping those in
need, if we choose to do so.
"Why is it any more of a Ponzi scheme than the military or the
highways. 1950 taxpayers pay in, 1950 recipients take out. 1982
taxpayers pay in, 1982 taxpayers take out. It's an ongoing
program."
Why?
Because the money spent on highways produced actual productive
physical assets and the money spent on the military provides
important national security services for all citizens to protect
their lives and property whereas Social Security does nothing more
than redistribute cash from one group of individual citizens to
antother. The ones doing the paying are getting nothing of value in
exchange for their money.
Here's my political realignment fantasy:
The GOP seems to have a good grip on electoral success right now.
(Sure, it could change, but they seem to be doing pretty well.)
They're good at spending, and building a nice pork machine.
Just as with the Medicare prescription drug bill, they'll want to
be able to maintain "good" credentials on social security to
capture a big chunk of the Boomer retiree vote. So fiscal
discipline will go out the window, and Bush will turn out to be the
harbinger of a new trend in the GOP rather than a particularly
craven fluke.
For a while, of course, the Democrats will be no better. But as the
current Democratic leaders start to retire, and as young workers
find themselves saddled with increasing taxes to provide for the
elderly, an inter-generational divide will emerge. Young workers
will of course blame the party in power (the GOP, which is
geographically favored to maintain a lock on the Senate and
Electoral College, and has the redistricting machine to maintain a
lock on the House). Maverick Democrats will start to rail against
the mounting burden of taxes facing workers. They are, after all,
supposedly the party of unions and (allegedly) the party of
culturally liberal students and young voters.
Sure, the current crop of Democratic politicians will resist. But
politics is often more about constituencies than issues issues. The
old, getting lots of goodies, will favor the status quo and the
currently powerful GOP. The young, being squeezed, will blame the
GOP and take advantage of some alleged natural allies in the
Democrats (the Dems' alleged proclivities toward unions and young
voters).
Eventually, the Democrats will become the party of fiscal
discipline.
Will it happen overnight? Of course not. Who would have thought a
generation ago that a Republican born in Connecticut would ever
sweep the South in a Presidential race? (i.e. Bush in 2000) These
realignments take time. And the Democrats will never become good
enough to satisfy those yearning for an ideologically pure fiscal
conservative. But they may become a lesser evil if an
intergenerational transfer of wealth becomes the defining issue of
US politics, and new leadership in the Dems sides with young
workers.
So "Ponzi Scheme" = "Something I don't like." OK, Gil.
Poor, "I agree that no one should stop you or I from helping those
in need, if we choose to do so."
And I believe that human beings matter, whether people feel like
helping them or not.
Here's my political realignment fantasy:
The GOP seems to have a good grip on electoral success right now.
(Sure, it could change, but they seem to be doing pretty well.)
They're good at spending, and building a nice pork machine.
Just as with the Medicare prescription drug bill, they'll want to
be able to maintain "good" credentials on social security to
capture a big chunk of the Boomer retiree vote. So fiscal
discipline will go out the window, and Bush will turn out to be the
harbinger of a new trend in the GOP rather than a particularly
craven fluke.
For a while, of course, the Democrats will be no better. But as the
current Democratic leaders start to retire, and as young workers
find themselves saddled with increasing taxes to provide for the
elderly, an inter-generational divide will emerge. Young workers
will of course blame the party in power (the GOP, which is
geographically favored to maintain a lock on the Senate and
Electoral College, and has the redistricting machine to maintain a
lock on the House). Maverick Democrats will start to rail against
the mounting burden of taxes facing workers. They are, after all,
supposedly the party of unions and (allegedly) the party of
culturally liberal students and young voters.
Sure, the current crop of Democratic politicians will resist. But
politics is often more about constituencies than issues issues. The
old, getting lots of goodies, will favor the status quo and the
currently powerful GOP. The young, being squeezed, will blame the
GOP and take advantage of some alleged natural allies in the
Democrats (the Dems' alleged proclivities toward unions and young
voters).
Eventually, the Democrats will become the party of fiscal
discipline.
Will it happen overnight? Of course not. Who would have thought a
generation ago that a Republican born in Connecticut would ever
sweep the South in a Presidential race? (i.e. Bush in 2000) These
realignments take time. And the Democrats will never become good
enough to satisfy those yearning for an ideologically pure fiscal
conservative. But they may become a lesser evil if an
intergenerational transfer of wealth becomes the defining issue of
US politics, and new leadership in the Dems sides with young
workers.
You know, I'm surprised that most people don't support just demanding that everyone reproduce at least thrice, and punish those who refuse. It's so much easier to just go more extreme with the pronatalism than to shift gears.
The economics don't work out, Randy. Opportunity costs and all of that. It makes a lot more sense just to import new workers from countries that can produce them more cheaply.
thoreau,
While your post made me touch myself several times, I don't see any
reason to believe the Dems are going in that direction. Then again,
they don't appear to be going in any direction, so who knows.
Pavel: In absence of principle, the metric for decisions is
efficiency. There's a mechanism incorporating all conscious and
subconscious material and emotional valuations in order to arrive
at the most efficent allocations. You guessed it: free
market.
Joe: Sounds like you're in tough shape. Maybe you could petition
joe for a little help.
Randy: I agree with joe. Discounting all the "for the children"
subsidies paid before the new labor is plugged into the matrix,
they represent a future liability to the SS system. If we keep
denying immigrants legal status, we can savor the fruits of their
labor without writing checks our children can't cash.
===
Maybe if we let OBL kill a third of the population, hopefully
through an aged-preferring biological attack, the SS accounts could
be put back in balance? Who would have guessed that Terrorist No.1
was actually trying to help us?
Protect Social Security--Push Granny Down the
Stairs!
Raise teh SS tax and get control of costs.
All course, in the end, the wealth of the boomers
is going to be at risk.
Then again, Inflation can do wonders, too.
"So "Ponzi Scheme" = "Something I don't like." OK, Gil."
LOL
Let me know if you ever happen to think of a SUSTANTIVE
rebuttal.
"... and as young workers find themselves saddled with
increasing taxes to provide for the elderly, an inter-generational
divide will emerge. Young workers will of course blame the party in
power (the GOP, which is geographically favored to maintain a lock
on the Senate and Electoral College, and has the redistricting
machine to maintain a lock on the House)..."
Sounds like a stretch to me. The Democrats were the ones who
created all those "entitlement" programs in the first place - AND
the ones who been primarily responsible for greatly expanding them
for about 60 years or so. I don't see why the "young" voters would
give Democrats a pass on that.
Gilbert-
The Democrats and Republicans of today are not the Democrats and
Republicans of 70 years ago. The two parties are constantly
changing coalitions formed to acquire and maintain power.
Southerners now vote predominantly GOP even though Lincoln was a
Republican. New England, once a GOP stronghold, now mostly leans
Democratic. Teddy Roosevelt, a Republican, created the national
parks and is praised (however rightly or wrongly) by modern
environmentalists, yet most environmentalists (however right or
wrong their stances) vote Democrat.
I could go on and on, but the point is that the parties evolve. If
young workers grow tired of being squeezed for an
inter-generational transfer of wealth, they'll be more likely to
blame the status quo then to reach back in time to the 1930's. If
the GOP continues its profligate ways and maintains its hold on
power, they will be blamed and the Democrats may (ironically)
evolve in a fiscally conservative direction.
On the other hand, if the GOP loses its grip on power and also
backs away from an intergenerational transfer of wealth, angry
young voters might tip Republican, and the GOP may return to
principles, at least for a while.
Either way, if an intergenerational transfer of wealth becomes a
major dividing issue in the US, one of the two parties will evolve
in a more fiscally conservative direction to satisfy angry young
workers, and one will probably try to get as many votes as possible
from the elderly, abandoning fiscal caution to the wind. Whatever
names those parties have is irrelevant, what matters is the
coalitions that they put together and the platforms and tactics
used to maintain those coalitions.
Sorry Rob,
I should have been a bit more specific in my proposal (way up near
the top of this thread).
The whole point was that everybody who's paid into the system
should get back what they're owed. If the solution is to be
politically viable, no group can get shortchanged or have their
benefits reduced.
As it stands, SS has a whole heap of future liabilities to future
retirees, but as far as assets go, it has treasury bonds (which
aren't assets at all, but claims on future tax revenue).
So SS will be funded out of a combination of future payroll taxes
and general tax revenue. The "trust fund" is nothing but IOU's from
the government.
The proposed solution requires an immediate end to payroll taxes
while still paying out the obligations. This basically has to be
done out of tax revenue, at least it's honest.
The present annuitants will keep collecting their annuities...
nothing difficult about that.
The present contributors get a "retirement bond". The face value
would have to be the present value of their total contributions to
date, using a market based interest rate (like LIBOR). The bonds
would have to be marketable, so that people are free to sell their
bonds and transfer their claim to the buyer. The bonds would be
identical in every regard except for maturity date and face value.
I expect that the retirement bond market would beocome pretty
significant. Bonds would be pooled and repackaged to suit the
maturity preferences of investors.
How do we pay for it all... the same way we would have had to pay
for SS in its present form. The proposal would just honestly
account for the accrued liabilities and make the system
transparent.
NO, NO, NO!!!
That is not what Greenspan says... He says that we need to use a
slower growing index for the benefits as well as starting to pay it
later. Both of which are minor changes and probably should be
seriously considered.
Also we already are partially privatizing SS thru 401k's etc. and
we all agree that they should be expanded, and ways to bring them
down to the lower income people, perhaps having rebates rather than
deductions as these would allow the lower incomes to get equal
support.
What is not being discussed is what I read is a much more serious
problem, Medicare... It seems that with minor adjustments SS is
fixable, but we do not have any way to deal with the rapidly
increasing cost of medical treatment and this, as I read it, will
be much more serious.
If private insurance companies, at 20% adminstration costs can
offer the same or better care without being subsidized and cherry
picking, as can Medicare at 2% adminstration costs, then GREAT. but
if not then we probably should recognize that this is our major
problem, e.g. how we want to deal with medical costs of the aged
and uninsured.
"how we want to deal with medical costs of the aged and
uninsured."
The same way that we deal with their costs for every other good.
They pay for what they get.
Why should medical costs be any different Mike?
Do it for the children!!!
Eliminate social security.
Stop the current generation of retirees, the same generation that
demands full accountability out of today's young people and
constantly wails about responsibility, from passing the bill to
their kids and their kids' kids.
Nothing will work except what Greenspan suggests: raise the
retirement age. You have to balance the number of retirees
receiving goods and services with the workers supplying them and
paying for them. That's the mathematical invariant.
Privatizing won't help. It just changes the financing, and no
financing at whatever can work with an unfavorable ratio of
retirees to workers.
What will happen if you privatize? The average return on investment
will fall (everybody buys at once, and everybody sells at once)
until the average retirement is postponed enough for everybody.
It's exactly the same as with the Social Security program. It's the
worker/retiree ratio, not paper money, that rules.
Incidentally the government _must_ spend all current Social
Security contributions. There's no way for it to save money. It
must return it to the economy or the Fed simply prints more, with
the same effect.
Thoreau
The closest thing that Americans will ever have to a libertarian
party (among real contenders for office) is the Republican party
they have now...because that is a as close to a Libertarian party
as American voters want to have among their serious choices. And
the "bundling" of a certain amount of free-market economics with a
certain amount of cultural conservatism is, for most voters, a
logical and palatable mix.
What CAN change is the center of gravity: the Democratic voter of
today is both far more Hawkish AND far more sceptical of
government-run economics than the Democratic voter of a generation
ago; the Republican voter of today is far more culturally liberal
than the Republican voter of a generation ago.
One other thing needs to change: the libertarian of today needs to
be far more culturally conservative than the libertarian of a
generation ago. Take Thoreau for example...why waste your energy
promoting that goofy gay-marriage crap-- something NOBODY really
wants, needs, or has any use for?
Joe is right. There is no reason in principle why the government
cannot tax T% of payroll income and divide it up among retirees
every year from now until the heat death of the sun. The amount
each retiree gets will obviously depend on how big T is, how fast
aggregate payroll income grows, and how many retirees there are: if
the number of retirees gets large relative to aggregate payroll
income, taxes will have to go up and/or benefits will have to go
down (and/or you can redefine "retiree" by raising the retirement
age). But there's no reason to think that the system will
inevitably go up in flames.
Privatization is as good a solution for the ails of Social Security
as wakalixes.
In order to keep our promises, we need to contend ourselves
with the knowledge that Congress undertook a Constitutionally
permissible obligation that fucked us all...Simple fix is to amend
the Constitution to bar Congress from doint this again, or to get
another three judges on the Supreme Court who believe that
interstate commerce isn't as pervasive as Congress'
thinks.
Social Security doesn't have anything to do with the interstate
commerce clause. It's spending for the general welfare, which is
explicitly permitted. (Which is not to say that it's a good or bad
idea, just that it's clearly constitutional whatever you think of
the interstate commerce clause.)
alkali: Just to be argumentative... Social Security directly
promotes the welfare of its recipients, not the general population.
It is inherently discriminatory.
It took a Constitutional amendment to permit discriminatory
taxation. People complain less loudly about selective handouts.
joe:
"And I believe that human beings matter, whether people feel like
helping them or not."
I think what you mean to say is that OLD human beings matter, and
to hell with the rest of us who suddenly have to pay for all of
their medicine because they didn't save for it and pay for their
retirements because they didn't save for it. Nevermind that this
generation already works more than a third of their lives for
government programs on average, and nevermind that there are fewer
of us supporting elderly who insist that each new life extending
medicine is a human right, forcing us to pay even longer.
There had better be a shit load of immigrants making a shit load of
money to be taxed. Oh, wait a minute, the universal stimulus
package from the Donkey party is to cut payroll taxes on 'working
people'. I agree that it is one of our only hopes, but to pretend
this isn't a problem is a joke. No responsible person in their 30s
should be living their lives under they impression that social
security will pay them a dime unless it taxes them to death to get
it.
It is a joke, much like the joke alkali tells when he indicates
that T% of income will be subject to how much we have and not how
much old people will vote themselves.
Take a look at the arguments Joe raises. He doesn't give a crap who
will be supporting him, what level of taxation they have to bear,
or any such nonsense. The government promised him that he'd get a
check and free drugs, and by god that's what matters.
Gays should back this. With SS benefits privatized, partners could bequeath their estate to the other.
Walter-
You may have just turned the evangelicals away from SS
privatization... :)
I don't think that "privatization" is the answer if it is to
follow the pattern of turning the reins of faltering government
program over to a private entity to manage. The Social Security
scheme is doomed to failure regardless of who is running it (unless
they can resurrect Charles Ponzi himself.)
The only realistic way to avoid the impending disaster is to
"eliminate" Social Security.
Privatizing Social Security can only end in massive corruption
followed by a nationalized wall street. I can't believe that nobody
sees this coming.
It just needs reform - dramatic means testing and a raised
retirement age for desk jobs.
Another potential way in which to "save" Social Security (and saving it is arguable...) is to 1) raise the retiremt age sufficiently to insure solvency and 2) means test the benefit.
Eliminating social security isn't an impossible objective.
Pick a date... say, for instance, January 1, 2005.
If, on that day, you are 65 or older and already entitled to
benefits on that date, you continue to collect your benefits out of
tax revenue.
If, on that day, you are between 18 and 64, and have already paid
into Social Security, you get to stop making payments and you
receive a marketable, zero-coupon, inflation-adjusted, government
bond that matures on your 65th birthday, with interest paid at
maturity and compounded annually at LIBOR. If you want the money
now, you sell the bond. Alternately, you can hold the bond, or even
buy more retirement bonds from other people.
By 2052, the last of the retirement bonds will have matured, and
unless there remain any annuitants who live to more that 112,
Social Security will be only be a distant memory.
Eliminating social security is certainly not impossible, as a
practical matter. Politically, though, well that's another
story.
Privatization, though, is certainly possible politically, and could
well be a necessary first step in someday ensuring that abolishing
SS completely is not such a political impossibility.
I think you misunderstand the public on this, thoreau. Outside
of conservatives, who'd hate the program on principle no matter
what financial shape it was in, dissatisfaction with Social
Security isn't based on opposition to public financing of
retirement income. It's based on support for public financing of
retirement income, and fear that said financing (and said income)
won't be there when our generation's turn comes.
People are happy to finance other people's grannies' retirement,
they just don't like the idea of not getting the same when their
time comes.
Joe [Big J]: You change the rules of the game by expecting
21st-century treatments. You were promised health care and living
support in 1963. How about we give the boomers sixties-era medicine
and procedures, along with the handouts required to afford
sixties-era living standards? O.K., maybe we can justify 80s-era
equivalents, to come closer to an average level of care over the
boomers' careers.
If you expect to retire at your final year's salary (with
equivalent benefits), you'll have to pay significantly more (as %
of wage) in all the preceding years. Unless the state absolves you
of your responsibility for retirement planning.
The same sentiments can be applied to veterans. If you got shot in
Vietnam, you get benefits fixed at the time of incident.
If the cryopreserving/reanimation fantasy ever actually works, will
the state be obligated to exhume and return to life all past
citizens?
Ron Hardin wrote:
Nothing will work except what Greenspan suggests: raise the retirement age. You have to balance the number of retirees receiving goods and services with the workers supplying them and paying for them. That's the mathematical invariant.
That�s one part of it. Another would be to reduce the COLA (cost of
living adjustments) which are based on the CPI (consumer price
index) which overstates inflation and actually increases the
standard of living of federal entitlement program recipients rather
than keeping them even with inflation. Another would be to base the
original benefit they receive on price-indexing rather than
wage-indexing which alone would fix the problem.
Privatizing won't help. It just changes the financing, and no financing at whatever can work with an unfavorable ratio of retirees to workers.
Actually it would help. The problem is not just the ratio of
workers to retirees but rather that each worker is promised more in
benefits than s/he pays into the system. That�s why we have an
�unfunded liability� for the program. The unfunded liability
represents the net present value of how much more
the program has promised in benefits than it is projected to take
in from revenue. If we let workers opt out, it means that they
would not be paying payroll taxes (or at least as much in payroll
taxes depending on the particulars) into the system (1) but it also
means that they would not be receiving retirement benefits. Since
they were promised more in benefits than they were expected to pay
in FICA taxes, it would actually make the problem more solvent
because the net effect is a lower unfunded liability.
What will happen if you privatize? The average return on investment will fall (everybody buys at once, and everybody sells at once) until the average retirement is postponed enough for everybody. It's exactly the same as with the Social Security program. It's the worker/retiree ratio, not paper money, that rules.
I disagree. When pension plans start to pay out to their
recipients, they don�t liquidate their portfolios all at once.
Often what they do is convert part of it to an annuity to get a
stream of income to pay out benefits while still remaining invested
in the market. There is no reason to believe that everyone is going
to get in or out of the market at the same time.
Incidentally the government _must_ spend all current Social Security contributions. There's no way for it to save money. It must return it to the economy or the Fed simply prints more, with the same effect.
I agree that if we opt for privatization, there will be a temporary
short-fall with the loss of the payroll taxes. However as this is
smaller than the long-term shortfalls that will occur
without privatization (as we would have to pay
more in benefits than we collect in payroll taxes), I would rather
have to deal with the smaller problem now than put off the larger
problem later. That�s how we got into this situation in the first
place.
joe: People are happy to make other people finance
their granny's retirement. Precious few look at the FICA
line on their pay stub and exclaim, "Damn, I wish I could have paid
more!"
Thorley: Thanks for making more sophisticated arguments supporting
sentiments I expressed.
Two of the most ignorant statements I've ever come across:
1. In order to keep our promises, we need to contend ourselves with
the knowledge that Congress undertook a Constitutionally
permissible obligation that fucked us all...
and...
2. Social Security doesn't have anything to do with the interstate
commerce clause. It's spending for the general welfare, which is
explicitly permitted.
I can't believe I'm reading this crap.
Social Security was never constitutional at any time
whatsoever...period....end of that story. The interstate commerce
clause has nothing whatsoever to do with SS and never will,
regardless of how twisted you're reading of it is. As for the
nonsense concerning the "general welfare", that is in the preamble
and is NOT PART OF THE CONSTITUTION!!!!. If anything and everything
the Feds wish to do is considered to provide for the "general
welfare" then you have just repealed the entire constitution in a
defacto manner and declared an end to our Republic.
AARRRRRGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!
Mark, you're quite welcome. Each of us must do our part for this fight and I'm happy to make whatever small contribution I can offer.
One other thing about raising the retirement age which I do not
know if anyone has addressed yet. Opponents of this reform have
often pointed out (correctly) that there are many people who had
jobs which were so physically demanding (for example my grandmother
has a crooked back from a lifetime of working on a farm and in a
canning factory) that some people may just be physically incapable
of working longer. There are two reasons why I do not believe that
this is problem.
First, any increase in the retirement age would �out of political
necessity � be grandfathered in and not affect people on the system
already. One of the more interesting employment demographic changes
occurred in the early/mid 1990�s in which a majority of the
workforce became white collar rather than blue collar. AFAIK this
trend has only increased which means that this becomes less of a
consideration with each passing generation.
Second, there is already a built-in safety mechanism for dealing
with those people who remain and that is the disability portion of
Social Security. If every person who was unable to work longer to
receive their retirement benefits were to be on the disability
portion until they reached the new retirement age it would still be
a wash (we�d pay one instead of the other but we would not pay
more) for those individuals. For the majority of the workforce who
would still be physically capable of working, there would still be
a real savings in postponing when they receive their benefits.
Uh, outraged? Try Article I Section 8. I do agree that it has been misconstrued so as to allow the Federal government to do anything it pleases.
Gilbert Martin wrote:
I think it was stupid as well - but I don't see how that would make anybody turn to the Democrats. Their only complaint about it was that it wasn't generous enough. It they had been in charge, they would have created a plan even more expensive.
The President�s support of a prescription drug benefit for Medicare
is one of the more worrisome spending increases he has enacted. The
reason being that this is a new entitlement in perpetuity whereas
most of the other spending was discretionary spending that is less
politically difficult to cut in the future.
However, I agree with Gilbert Martin for three reasons.
First, the Democrats did want a more onerous plan as the Democratic
alternatives in the House and Senate were estimated to cost $600
and $900 billion over the next decade (and that�s assuming that
they did not hide any of the cost of their plans as was done with
the one the President agreed to) which was more expensive than the
one we got.
Second, the original plan the president wanted was actually smaller
and more targeted but was increased in size in order to get it
through the nearly-evenly-divided Senate over Democratic
objections. Something that proponents of �divided government� seem
to forget.
Finally, the new bill does actually include some
(but not enough IMO) provisions for competition in the Medicare
program which are going to be essential for any long-term cost
control of the program. I do not agree with some supporters of the
bill (of which I am not one) who said that these would entirely
offset the cost (1)of the new benefit but it may mitigate the
damage quite a bit. The Democrats do seem to want to do away with
any sort of competition in the program, which makes their proposals
for further changes even more onerous.
So yes by all means be upset with the prescription drug benefit. It
was a bad idea and while we seem to be stuck with it, we can still
push for further market-oriented reforms in the Medicare program as
well as some of the market-oriented policies (letting the
self-insured deduct health care costs, health care savings
accounts, expanding the ability of people to join their own risk
pools, etc.) the President proposed in his SOTU address. It
certainly is better than the Democratic alternative which supported
a worse prescription drug benefit, is against any sort of Medical
or Health Savings Accounts, and wants to create a new health care
entitlement on top of the existing ones.
TW
(1) I have heard some people say that it may have been a wise idea
to add a prescription drug benefit because if senior citizens have
easier access to prescription drugs, they can be used for
preventative care or are cheaper than alternatives such as surgery
that are covered by Medicare. Does anyone have any information on
this?
Thorley, The rub with argument #2 is your phrase "physically
capable of working." There are a lot of room between the SS
definition of disabled, and the point where someone's body is
broken down enough to be ready for retirement.
Now, obviously, if your response to a 68 year old with bad
arthritis who has to keep working is "You should have been smarter
with your money," the above argument isn't very compelling. But the
escape hatch you designed doesn't protect your recommendation from
charges that you're changing the rules mid-game.
Joe wrote:
Thorley, The rub with argument #2 is your phrase "physically capable of working." There are a lot of room between the SS definition of disabled, and the point where someone's body is broken down enough to be ready for retirement.
Really? Please enlighten us as to the difference.
"But the escape hatch you designed doesn't protect your
recommendation from charges that you're changing the rules
mid-game."
The rules have been changing all along ever since the "game" was
started - and the current retirees have been the beneficiary of
them. The benefits received by retirees AND the payroll taxes
workers pay were increased AFTER a lot of the retirees had retired
and started drawing their benfits. So those people got to get by
with keeping more of their meony on an after-tax basis most all of
their working lives because they were paying for less generous
benefits to the retirees who came before them and then after they
retired, they got their benefits boosted. There's no way that a
system can work equitably for everyone where some people get out a
lot more than they pay in. Some people (i.e the last ones in the
pipeline) are going be left holding the bag.
Here's my suggestion for a reform: Set a limit on the ratio of
lifetime cumulative benefits received to cumulative lifetime
contributions paid in (including the employer paid portion) for
every person receiving benefits. Set the limit at no more than 3 to
1. Calculate the ratio for every beneficiary right now and anyone
over that limit is simply cut off. No more benefit payments.
Of course such a plan would have no chance of getting enacted - but
it would be fair.
I must admit I never knew of another "general welfare" clause in
the constitution. Guess thats why I'm out here. Not only that, but
as I read it, the only thing standing between the Feds and ANYTHING
they wish to do is the 10th amendment. I dont want this to turn
into a whole 'nother thread but it seems to me that both sides in
every argument over constitutionality have something concrete they
can point to. Geniuses my ass.
Now that my day has been ruined I shall use our worthless
constitution to light myself on fire!!!!
It's important to remember about SS, that it is, not a savings
plan, nor ls it, an investment plan. It is a wealth
transfer plan.
The demographic change of the population dictate that, without
reform, Social Security will be paying out more in benefits than it
will be collecting in taxes by 2018, and that by 2042 the Social
Security trust fund would be exhausted.
If we try to avert this by raising taxes, the payroll taxes will
have to go up to an extent that the economy will be less productive
so that even constant dollar equivalent benefits will not provide
the retirees with equivalent purchasing power. Also, the tax burden
on the workers will be crushing. Raising payroll taxes is a
solution that will be not be good for any population group.
However, if workers are allowed the option of paying in less
payroll taxes it would lesson the future retirement benefit
liability of SS. And, what's more, it would reduce the unfunded
liability, moving it toward solvency for those who choose to
stay in.
The same population dynamics which buttress the case for doing this
also buttress the case for doing it ASAP instead of later since the
subtraction of PR taxes are much more easily adjusted for now then
later.
Self-interest can make this solution politically marketable. And,
if I may repeat; something often overlooked by those who seek
change in SS is that most parents do not want to adversely affect
their kids and Grand kids. But, it can be demonstrated that, that
is exactly what will happen if the government tries to fix this
mess via raising payroll taxes instead of privatizing.
Jason said:
Take a look at the arguments Joe raises. He doesn't give a crap who
will be supporting him, what level of taxation they have to bear,
or any such nonsense. The government promised him that he'd get a
check and free drugs, and by god that's what matters.
Actually this is a completely false representation of my
sentiments. I have three children who will be affected very much by
this just as I have been affected by what SS is presently paying
out. My point is that Greenspan and a lot of you other educated
people suddenly want to change the rules of a game I've been
playing since 1963 but at the same time you want to confiscate all
my equipment (send my job to India) so I'll be at even more of a
disadvantage.
Just for the record, if the medical and pharmaceutical
conglomerates relied on people like myself, they'd all close up
tomorrow. Barring major catastrophy, I average about 23 dollars per
year in medical costs so I'm not looking for free medicine or any
other handout. Give me back what I've paid in and the whole system
can go to hell as far as I care.
I only want a few years to catch my breath before I croak. I've
seen too many people work til they dropped dead just to pay for
food, taxes, and insurance.
I do think that as people (myself included) get within 10 years of
earliest elgibility for SS their contributions should go up
considerably, maybe 10 to 20 percent. I also think that any other
retirement or 'non earned' income should limit what a person can
draw.
Just in case anybody is fuzzy on the definition of a Ponzi
scheme:
"An illegal investment scheme in which investors are promised
impossibly high returns on their investments. These are scams in
which money from later investors is used to pay earlier investors.
The creators of the scheme get most of the profits while those who
come later are left with nothing because there are eventually an
insufficient number of new investors to pay the existing ones.
These scams inevitably collapse because they require exponential
growth in the number of participants at each step, which is
impossible...." -from www.investorwords.com
I'd say it fits SS just about perfectly. Redistribution of wealth
doesn't have anything to do with whether or not SS is a Ponzi
scheme. It's a Ponzi scheme because even though (on average)
everybody pays a lot of tax into the system, (on average) we've all
been promised a much greater benefit at retirement. Even if I loved
the Social Security program, I would still have to call it a Ponzi
scheme based on the definition provided.
Charles wrote
I've never held employment outside of being an independant contractor, so this hasn't yet effected me all that much.
Sure it has. Even if you�ve decided to break the law and not pay
FICA (in which case the effects could come later pending an IRS
audit), you still live and work in an economy in which employment
is depressed because of the payroll tax, economic growth is less
than what it could be because workers are unable to invest 11.67%
of their income, and government largess (along with the taxation,
regulation, and litigation which support it) is made more popular
because of universal entitlement programs like Medicare and Social
Security. If you think that hasn�t affected you yet or won�t in the
future, you�re dreaming.
Aside from any questions about these old monkeys riding my back... I can't for the life of me understand why libertarians are pushing privitized social security. It seems like an all or nothing issue.
The prospect of 76 million baby boomers becoming the �old monkeys�
and deciding to vote for a tax increase on those of us who are
still working to make up for the $56 Trillion unfunded liability
for Medicare and Social Security is sufficient motivation for me at
least to try and fix the problem or at least mitigate the damages
while we still can.
Social Security doesn't require exponential growth in the number
of participants at each step. In fact, the ration of
employed:retired has been dropping for years, and it's still in the
black. The only reason there's even a temporary fiscal problem
projected, is because of the extraordinary demographic bubble of
the baby boom. If the rate of the ratio's decrease was just a
little lower, there would be no problem.
Please note the complete lack of exponential growth in workers from
1945-present.
"I could go on and on, but the point is that the parties evolve.
If young workers grow tired of being squeezed for an
inter-generational transfer of wealth, they'll be more likely to
blame the status quo then to reach back in time to the 1930's. If
the GOP continues its profligate ways and maintains its hold on
power, they will be blamed and the Democrats may (ironically)
evolve in a fiscally conservative direction."
Blaming the "status quo" doesn't translate into exclusively blaming
the Republicans. The entitlement programs are non discretionary
programs. The Republican administration cannot unilaterally cut
spending on them and the Reublicans do not have a significant
enough majority in Congress to pass legislation to cut them even if
they could get everyone on that side of the aisle to cooperate in
doing so.
"Uh, outraged? Try Article I Section 8. I do agree that it has
been misconstrued so as to allow the Federal government to do
anything it pleases."
Indeed it has been. The "general welfare" language in Article I
Section 8 was only intended to refer to spending related to the
other specifically ennumerated categories in that Section. Who said
that? James Madison did. And he should know what it meant since he
was the one who wrote it in the first place.
In any event, by no stretch can "entitlement" programs be construed
as "general welfare" since they are specific welfare for selected
individuals - not general welfare.
Gilbert-
If the only issue is the existence of Social Security then younger
voters might not blame the GOP. But if the GOP continues to sign
off on old-age entitlement expansion like it did with the
prescription drug boondoggle, young voters will have good reason to
blame the GOP. Yes, a lot of Republican members of Congress voted
against it. But a lot voted for it, and the idiot President signed
it.
Okay joe, you got me. It doesn't require exponential growth in
the number of workers. But because (on average) people withdraw
more than they paid in, it does require a steady increase in the
number of taxpayers to support current beneficiaries if the program
is to remain solvent. My main point of comparison was the part
where those who run the scheme pocket the difference between the
collections and the amount required to pay current beneficiaries.
Don't you find it the least bit outrageous that Congress has taken
the surpluses since Day 0 of the program and simply spent
them?
I agree with you that if the ratio of retired persons' benefits
withdrawn to working persons' taxes collected could be decreased,
disaster could be averted. SS could be saved. I guess it remains to
be seen whether the young will agree to work until age 75 for
reduced benefits in order that their parents can quit at age 65 on
full benefits.
" I guess it remains to be seen whether the young will agree to
work until age 75 for reduced benefits in order that their parents
can quit at age 65 on full benefits."
Yeah.
Also remember that who've been drawing all those full benefits for
a good period of time were paying in a lot lower payroll tax rate
back when they were working than those who are paying to support
them know are.
"But if the GOP continues to sign off on old-age entitlement
expansion like it did with the prescription drug boondoggle, young
voters will have good reason to blame the GOP. Yes, a lot of
Republican members of Congress voted against it. But a lot voted
for it, and the idiot President signed it."
I think it was stupid as well - but I don't see how that would make
anybody turn to the Democrats.
Their only complaint about it was that it wasn't generous enough.
It they had been in charge, they would have created a plan even
more expensive.
Rob sez, "But because (on average) people withdraw more than
they paid in, it does require a steady increase in the number of
taxpayers to support current beneficiaries if the program is to
remain solvent" It does not require an increase in the number of
workers. In fact, it has done quite well with a relative decrease
in the number of workers, due to increases in productivity per
worker.
"Don't you find it the least bit outrageous that Congress has taken
the surpluses since Day 0 of the program and simply spent them?"
No, I'd prefer not to see the US government sit on a financial
instrument for 40 years. That money is better off out in the
economy.
The Social Security surplus, and the entire two-sets-of-books
setup, is an accounting trick. The government has income from
various taxes, and it spends money on various programs. Social
Security is no different.
"I guess it remains to be seen whether the young will agree to work
until age 75 for reduced benefits in order that their parents can
quit at age 65 on full benefits." Or we could just make sure the
national debt is low enough going into the temporary retirement
bubble that we can afford to have deficits that are slightly higher
for a few years. Like Al Gore recommended.
Trying to avoid this solution, and jacking up debt in order to
create an otherwise-avoidable crises, explains why Shrub is so
happy to see the deficit explode.
Gilbert-
Voters won't turn to the Democrats, but a new generation of
Democrats may turn to disaffected voters. In liberal enclaves with
younger voting populations, some maverick Democrats might start to
win by promising to cut the SS and Medicare taxes. We wouldn't see
an overnight change in platform, just as we didn't see an overnight
North-South swap between the parties, when the "Solid South" of LBJ
became the "Red States" of George Bush.
So as a few maverick Democrats in traditionally liberal enclaves
start pushing a very unusual economic platform, these Democrats
might find some unusual allies. Things can change, slowly.
Bottom line: If an intergenerational transfer of wealth becomes the
key issue of US politics, one of the parties will side with the
young. And there are reasons to think that the Democrats might
evolve into that party. Of course, in doing so they will change and
no longer be the party that they are today, and the GOP will party
that it is today. They've done it before, abandoning most of their
features except the label. They could do it again.
From Cato:
http://www.socialsecurity.org/pubs/articles/bb-01-27-04.html
"Social Security's actuaries report that without reform, Social
Security would be paying out more in benefits than it would be
collecting in taxes by 2018, and that by 2042 the Social Security
trust fund would be exhausted.
If we try to avert this by raising taxes, the payroll taxes will
have to go up to an extent that the economy will be way less
productive so that even constant dollar equivalent benefits will
not provide the retirees with equivalent purchasing power. Also,
the tax burden on the workers will be crushing.
Phasing out of SS with privatization is the only answer. Everyone
will be richer for it. The natural constituency for this is the 50
and younger group. The best thing to do is to be vocal in support
of privatization. Self-interest will make the message resonate with
a portion of the population that is politically potent.
The demographics are there for change if the message becomes part
of political currency. If this truth is spoken to power others will
want to lessen the power of SS. But, they must hear the message
first. Very few political institutions, to the extent the SS status
quo does, thrive on the fear of speaking out for change.
Another important thing often overlooked by SS
status Quo opponents is that most old people don't want to screw
their kids and Grand kids. But, it can be demonstrated that, that
is exactly what will happen if the government tries to fix this
mess by raising payroll taxes instead of privatizing.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245