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			<title>Reason Magazine - Staff</title>
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			<managingEditor>info@reason.com (Reason Online)</managingEditor>
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<title>No Easy Way Out</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/29961.html</link>
<description> 	&lt;p&gt;&quot;In years past, you could hold a hearing like this in a bowling alley at 3 a.m.,&quot;
	 observed Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.) on March 25, when a Senate subcommittee heard 
testimony from members of the Advisory Council on Social Security. The 13-member 
advisory council is the latest incarnation of a committee that has been appointed by every 
administration since FDR. Usually its reports do not receive much notice. But the current 
advisory council, appointed in 1994 by Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna 
Shalala, has been considering dramatic changes in the Social Security system, including 
various forms of privatization. Its report, which was scheduled to be released in April, has 
been anxiously awaited, with politicians and journalists trying to predict the 
recommendations of the deeply divided panel. Meanwhile, the House Public Pension 
Reform Caucus, co-chaired by Reps. Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz.) and Charles Stenholm (D-Tex.), 
has attracted about 40 members from both parties since it was formed last August. As 
Simpson noted at another Social Security hearing in March, &quot;People are talking about this 
issue as never before.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;That's because they are finally starting to recognize that, without fundamental
reform,  the Social Security system will start to collapse in the second decade of the next century, as 
the baby boom generation retires. A number of reformers have proposed ways to avoid the 
crash (see &quot;Retirement Plans,&quot; March). So far, however, these plans have not received 
close scrutiny. Given Social Security's importance in our national life and in the retirement 
calculations of millions, and the pain that its bankruptcy would inflict, the temptation to 
escape into utopian quackery is enormous. For the sake of all concerned, it must be 
resisted, lest we embrace some clever but unsound scheme promising Americans their 
fantasy: a painless ending in which no hard choices are made, no one gives up anything, 
and everybody is happy.  

&lt;p&gt;A case in point is National Development Council Chairman Sam Beard's proposal to 
divide Social Security's payroll tax into two tiers, one to pay current retirees' benefits, the 
other to be invested in individual investment and retirement accounts (IRAs). Beard has 
been promoting his scheme assiduously, in Policy Review, in &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.wsj.com&quot;&gt;The Wall Street Journal&lt;/a&gt;, and 
in his book &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1558154892/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;Restoring Hope in America: The Social Security Solution&lt;/a&gt;, recently published 
by the Institute for Contemporary Studies. Beard's book exhorts readers to join a citizens' 
campaign for his plan; it even offers &quot;talking points&quot; to help them. Republican presidential 
candidate Steve Forbes similarly proposed putting part of payroll taxes into IRAs or 401(k) 
plans. Certain to be prominent in the Social Security reform debate, Beard's plan is a good 
candidate for a hard look. It doesn't pass muster.

&lt;p&gt;In his book Beard claims that his plan can &quot;turn every hard-working American into a 
millionaire&quot; via &quot;a radically redesigned Social Security system.&quot; By century's end, more 
than 100 million Americans will be earning at least $10,000 annually. &quot;Allow them to set 
aside their Social Security payments into personal investment and retirement accounts--and 
they will become millionaires.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;Beard would &quot;begin by keeping our promises to current retirees,&quot; using Tier 1 of the 
payroll tax. &quot;Most of your Social Security taxes will be pledged to pay the Social Security 
of existing retirees.&quot; For Beard deems Social Security &quot;a sacred contract&quot; and intends to 
pay current retirees all benefits &quot;as promised under the existing system,&quot; i.e., mandated by 
present law.

&lt;p&gt;One's remaining payroll taxes would go into Tier 2 for IRAs. &quot;Will it require paying 
higher taxes? No.&quot; Anyone who paid at least $500 in payroll taxes could participate. Drawn 
from payroll taxes and voluntary savings, Tier 2 contributions would be capped at $3,000 a 
year. The first $500 in payroll taxes would go automatically into Tier 2, matched by payroll 
taxes paid by your employer, up to a total of $1,560 in taxes. Workers earning $12,580 or 
more could have set-asides of $1,560, $2,500, or $3,000. To increase your set-aside to 
$2,500, you would add $628 in savings, matched by another $314 in taxes. To hit the 
$3,000 maximum, $1,500 in payroll taxes would be matched by $1,500 in savings.

&lt;p&gt;This money would grow into huge nest eggs: &quot;If you earn $12,580 or more per year, 
you can amass a capital pool of $1,291,433 with $30 per week set aside from your taxes.&quot; 
How? &quot;The magic of compound interest&quot;: 8 percent interest generates that sum in 45 years; 
$2,005,799 in 50. Since the return on the Standard &amp; Poor 500 stock index during the past 
70 years has averaged 10.2 percent, Beard argues, a rate of 8 percent is not farfetched.

&lt;p&gt;Besides saving Social Security, Beard's scheme to create &quot;100 million millionaires&quot; 
serves another agenda: to &quot;democratize capital ownership&quot; à la Louis Kelso, father of 
Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs). Most wealth, Kelso argued, is produced by 
capital. &quot;The magic of compound interest&quot; would enable workers to become rich and obtain 
a second income: payments from their capital. Furthermore, this &quot;mind-boggling&quot; 
additional wealth--100 million millionaires means a $100 trillion capital pool--would have 
&quot;unprecedented&quot; potential to stimulate economic growth. A tempting prospect indeed.

&lt;p&gt;Unfortunately, Beard's plan is untenable. Use payroll taxes to simultaneously keep
all  of Social Security's promises to current retirees and create &quot;100 million millionaires&quot;--
without tax increases? It can't be done.

&lt;p&gt;Before we adopt any two-tier scheme, the first thing to ask is this: Assuming we're 
going to pay current retirees full benefits under present law, how much of the payroll tax 
must be retained to do so? This question is the crux of the matter, since its answer 
determines the scheme's possibilities. Yet Beard nowhere asks, much less answers, it. 
Indeed, he doesn't even seem to realize that it needs asking. 

&lt;p&gt;A handy way to answer the question is to consider the recent performance of the 
payroll tax. In recent years its revenues have been not only paying benefits but creating 
trust fund surpluses. From 1985 to 1995, the surplus of payroll tax revenue over benefit 
payments averaged 9.6 percent of revenue. So in an average year, 90.4 percent of revenue 
went to pay benefits, leaving 9.6 percent for the trust funds. This generates a rough proxy 
for the Tier 1/Tier 2 split that a commitment to pay current retirees full present-law benefits 
would dictate. Honoring that commitment requires (rounding to simplify things) 90 percent 
of payroll taxes, leaving only 10 percent for Tier 2. But this means that if we insist on 
paying current retirees full benefits, most Social Security taxpayers would have virtually 
nothing left for their IRAs--nowhere near enough to create a million-dollar nest egg in 45 
years.

&lt;p&gt;A $10,000-a-year worker putting 90 percent of his $1,240 combined employer-
employee payroll tax into Tier 1 would have only $124 a year, or $2.38 a week, left for 
Tier 2. After 45 years at 8 percent, this would grow to just $102,652. 	

&lt;p&gt;Higher-income taxpayers won't hit the cool million, either. At $61,200, Social 
Security's maximum taxable income, a 90/10 split of the $7,589 payroll tax leaves only 
$14.60 a week to invest, which would generate only $628,067. Not even the highest-
income taxpayers, then, would be able to have &quot;$20-$30 a week set aside from your 
taxes&quot;--not while paying full present-law benefits. Becoming a millionaire would require 
adding far more voluntary savings than Beard contemplates. 

&lt;p&gt;Besides, these are only nominal-dollar nest eggs. By Beard's own admission, adjusted 
for 4 percent annual inflation, $1,291,433 becomes $229,935; $1,026,524 shrinks to 
$182,769. Our $10,000-a-year worker's $102,652 thus becomes $18,277.

&lt;p&gt;Not only does Beard ignore the issue of how much payroll tax would be needed to pay 
benefits, but his plan counts payroll taxes twice. He says &quot;most&quot; payroll taxes would go 
into Tier 1 to pay current retirees' benefits. But his book's examples of capital 
accumulation from money &quot;set aside from your taxes&quot; on incomes up to $12,580 assume 
that the entire tax goes into Tier 2. And he consistently writes as if all of everyone's payroll 
taxes would be invested: &quot;Allow them to set aside their Social Security payments...and they 
will become millionaires&quot;; &quot;the 12.4 percent payroll taxes compounded...will grow very 
substantially in personal savings and investment accounts&quot;; &quot;if they could set their current 
tax payments aside...&quot;.

&lt;p&gt;It doesn't add up. The same dollar cannot go into both Tier 1 and Tier 2. Paying 
current retirees all present-law benefits (Tier 1) would, we saw, require 90 percent of 
payroll taxes. But creating &quot;100 million millionaires&quot; (Tier 2) would require all payroll 
taxes, at least on incomes up to $12,580. Beard's plan would allow someone at the 
maximum taxable income to put $1,560 of payroll taxes into Tier 2, or 20.6 percent--more 
than twice what a 90/10 split permits. The conclusion is inescapable. We can use payroll 
taxes to pursue one goal or the other, but not both. 

&lt;p&gt;Something's got to give. 

&lt;p&gt;Sure enough, in &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1558154892/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;Restoring Hope in America&lt;/a&gt;,Beard escapes into something called  Liberty Bonds &quot;to finance the
two-tier system.&quot; Liberty Bonds are &quot;a new financial  instrument&quot; that would offer Americans &quot;the opportunity to trade promised Social Security 
benefits which come due from 1996 through 2025--a thirty-year period--for a future 
benefit.&quot; Retirees with &quot;more adequate&quot; income from private means can voluntarily defer 
receiving benefits and instead pass them on tax free after 30 years (2026-2055) to their 
heirs or others.

&lt;p&gt;Stripped of promotional humbug, Liberty Bonds are Beard's tacit admission that his 
plan doesn't work, that it overpromises, that it is unsound and must be &quot;financed&quot;--bailed 
out by asking current retirees who can afford it to lend Social Security money in exchange 
for not getting their benefits on time. Beard draws a specious analogy with a bankrupt firm 
asking creditors to accept deferred payment: &quot;The business will bring in a large infusion of 
capital, and pay off the creditors once profits return. Similarly, Liberty Bonds will infuse 
cash into Social Security.&quot; It takes monumental effrontery, the kind found in banana 
republics negotiating with Western banks, for a deadbeat not only to stiff his creditors but 
to ask them to lend him more money. Worse, this particular deadbeat's only &quot;profits&quot; for 
repaying his creditors are taxes on those selfsame creditors or their children.

&lt;p&gt;Coercion is statism's last resort when it runs out of tricks, and so it is here: &quot;If
a  voluntary plan does not work, I recommend implementing the Liberty Bond system on a 
mandated basis...a scaled formula could be created whereby Liberty Bonds...would 
become mandatory.&quot; This is a singularly obnoxious stiffing of retirees with private 
savings, penalizing them for being provident and thrifty. Mandatory &quot;Liberty&quot; Bonds also 
amount to taxing retirees--who thus get taxed twice, once in their working years and again 
in retirement--by forcing them to buy 30-year IOUs on their benefits. And whether 
voluntary or mandatory, 30-year benefit deferral is tantamount to benefit termination. So 
much for keeping all promises to current retirees. 

&lt;p&gt;The other possible escape is to raise payroll taxes on selected victims. As &lt;a href=&quot;../9603/fe.RICKss.text.html&quot;&gt;
described by  Rick Henderson in the March issue of REASON&lt;/a&gt;, Beard's plan implicitly
does this:  &quot;Workers who pay more than $3,000 a year in Social Security taxes couldn't invest all of 
their payroll taxes privately; benefits for current retirees would come from the payroll taxes 
these higher-wage workers pay.&quot; Translation: Taxpayers with taxable incomes between 
$24,194 a year (which corresponds to a $3,000 payroll tax) and $61,200 (the maximum) 
would carry the whole burden of supporting current retirees. Exempting taxable incomes 
up to $24,200 (rounding again for simplicity's sake) substantially narrows Social 
Security's tax base. Common sense says that if we narrow the tax base, we must raise tax 
rates to obtain the same revenue. Workers with $24,200 to $61,200 in taxable income 
would have to pay much higher payroll taxes.

&lt;p&gt;This would be an economic and moral disaster. The Social Security Bulletin's 1994 
annual statistical supplement includes tables giving the number of workers with taxable 
incomes below the 1991 maximum of $53,400 (since then increased, but these figures 
suffice for illustrative purposes). It turns out that workers with incomes below $24,200 
paid 38 percent ($121 billion) of 1991's total payroll tax revenue ($317 billion); workers 
with incomes from $24,200 to $53,400 paid 62 percent ($196 billion). So if workers with 
incomes below $24,200 had been allowed to put all their payroll taxes into Tier 2, and all 
of them did so (which would be their rational choice), in 1991 Social Security would have 
lost 38 percent of its revenue.

&lt;p&gt;Now, if people with taxable incomes from $24,200 to $53,400 were to support the 
retirees, they would have had to pay not $196 billion but all $317 billion, or 62 percent 
more. In other words, had Beard's plan been operating in 1991, these &quot;higher-wage 
workers&quot; would have had to pay a 62 percent higher payroll tax rate--i.e., 20 percent--all of 
it going into Tier 1, none into IRAs. So much for creating 100 million millionaires via 
payroll taxes. With today's maximum taxable income of $61,200, this tax hike would be 
smaller but still substantial. To use the payroll tax as an instrument of forced saving for 
these workers, so they too could have Tier 2 accounts, their taxes would have to go higher 
still. 

&lt;p&gt;Thus, this version of Beard's two-tier plan necessarily means a two-tier tax rate,
with  an abrupt, sharp jump when one's income hits a mere $24,200 or so. The effect on work 
incentives would be disastrous. It is not the plutocrats who would suffer--Social Security 
does not tax income above $61,200--but the middle class and small-scale entrepreneurs, 
who would despair at hitting so high a tax rate so quickly.

&lt;p&gt;At work here is not only Beard's flight from a fiscal bind of his own making but his 
egalitarian agenda of democratizing capital ownership. Lower-income taxpayers would be 
allowed to escape payroll taxes and become &quot;minimum-wage millionaires&quot;--thanks to 
bleeding even modestly higher incomes. Far from ushering in a utopia of saved Social 
Security, 100 million millionaires, and an ocean of capital to finance fabulous growth, 
Beard's plan is a grim recipe for economic cannibalism.

&lt;p&gt;In sum, Beard's two-tier plan cannot do what it promises to do without doing 
precisely what it promises not to do: raise taxes or cut benefits. It cannot work without 
making somebody suffer.

&lt;p&gt;Even if none of these problems existed, fiscal realities would kill the plan in the
cradle.  The Social Security Board of Trustees' actuarial analysis using &quot;high-cost&quot; assumptions--
the most realistic--projects that in 1999, payroll taxes will stop generating a surplus. In just 
three years, there will be no payroll taxes to spare for Tier 2.

&lt;p&gt;This exposure of the Beard plan's calamitous weaknesses is a cautionary tale for two-
tier plans in general and for the whole Social Security reform debate. There simply isn't 
enough wiggle room to allow current taxpayers to both pay full current retiree benefits and 
build nest eggs from payroll taxes. 

&lt;p&gt;As for Chilean-style privatization, its private pension option for taxpayers is
analogous  to Beard's Tier 2 and would likewise create a revenue shortfall requiring coverage, perhaps 
from general revenue, to pay current retirees full benefits. Again, making it work would 
require either beneficiary or taxpayer sacrifices. 

&lt;p&gt;The brutal truth is that Social Security's prospects are so bleak, and we have evaded
 reality for so long, that a cheap, painless solution is not possible. Beneficiary or taxpayer 
suffering is inevitable and necessary. Our first task here is to look reality in the face. That 
means admitting that you can't get something for nothing. It also means publicly 
demolishing the pernicious myths of Social Security, which still grip the minds of millions, 
including Beard. One doesn't get what one paid in; benefits are not an &quot;earned right&quot;; 
Social Security isn't retirement insurance. We have to face the immorality of Social 
Security, too. It is wrong to force people to support others. It is wrong, an odious abuse of 
trust and breach of faith, to lie to young and old about what is going on. And a system 
grounded in coercion, deceit, and dishonor does not deserve to survive. We must abandon 
the delusional entitlement mentality itself. There is no entitlement to comfortable retirement. 
Asserting that one exists doesn't make it true. The only guarantee in life is death. 

&lt;p&gt;Our best course is to accept the inevitable suffering and treat it as the price of
buying  back our freedom. Liberate the baby boomers and post-baby boomers--those born from 
1945 on--from Social Security taxes in exchange for their renouncing all benefits. They 
would be responsible for their retirement and, if they wish, they could invest their erstwhile 
payroll taxes in tax-free IRAs. Their share of the necessary suffering will be to see the 
payroll taxes they've already paid for what they really are-- transfers to today's elderly--and 
to forget about &quot;getting their money back,&quot; or any benefits at all. But they would finally be 
free to manage their money their way, which is how it should have been all along.

&lt;p&gt;As for current retirees and workers soon to retire, complete benefit termination is 
politically impossible--and after lying to them for decades the government is obligated to 
deliver something. But there is no legal or moral right to full current-law benefits, either. 
Retirees' share in the necessary suffering will be substantial benefit cuts. Benefits should 
suffice only to keep a retiree decently above poverty. They should be rigorously means-
tested: The Clark Cliffords of America have no right to the earnings of struggling single 
mothers bagging groceries. Such bare-bones benefits should be financed from directed 
general revenue, perhaps a temporary national sales tax. As the beneficiary population 
disappears, the tax would be reduced accordingly, until it too disappears. 

&lt;p&gt;To make this admittedly hard step as bearable for the elderly as possible, all
benefit  taxation, retirement earnings limitations, and taxes on retirement income from all sources 
should be abolished. Retirees could earn all they want and keep all of it--a long stride 
toward true economic liberty. 

&lt;p&gt;And if retirees' savings, earnings, and minimal benefits won't amount to much? Then 
let their children help them. That's what children are for. That's what &quot;family values&quot; 
mean. We could give a tax credit for supporting elderly parents, but it is odious to bribe 
people into doing the duty that family membership commands.

&lt;p&gt;I will not insult my readers' intelligence by pretending that this will be easy, fun,
or  painless. It won't be. But it will be honest. Current retirees who genuinely needed benefits 
would get something--not much, but something. Taxpayers would be liberated. And by the 
time baby boomers retire, Social Security would be gone--without taking America with it.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">29961@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jul 1996 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (John Attarian)</author>
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