Itโd be great if our president would level with the people during his annual address. Then, instead of calling him on his lies and half-truths, columnists could write something fun for, you know, Valentineโs Day.
But no. Bush says Social Securityโs going bankrupt. He touts costly plans to dismantle the program as we know itโjeopardizing our retirements and plunging our nation deeper in debt. Here are the facts, most coming from the Social Security Administrationโs own status report, www.ssa.gov.
Bush said: โThirteen years from now, in 2018, Social Security will be paying out more than it takes in.โ
Truth: The fact that Baby Boomers would eventually retire wasnโt lost on anyone. Thatโs why, since tweaking Social Security in 1977 and 1983, feds have been packing money into a Social Security โslushโ fund. This reserve fund, money over and above whatโs coming into Social Security, is juicy. As Boomers hang up their hats, weโll tap into this cash stash, causing reserve fund deficits as early as 2010. No surprise. Nothing to panic about.
โBy the year 2042, the entire system would be exhausted and bankrupt.โ
Trash: The reserve fund could run out as early as 2042. Boomers will be in their 90s by then. Social Security will hum along as usual until 2078.
โIf steps are not taken to avert that outcome, the only solutions would be dramatically higher taxes, massive new borrowing or sudden and severe cuts in Social Security benefits.โ
Trash: Yes, an increase in payroll taxes or a reduction in benefits or some combination of both would keep Social Security solvent beyond 2078. But thatโs not the only solution.
Sample many reform options at the Social Security Game, www.actuary.org/socialsecurity. On my first try, I saved Social Security by phasing in a higher retirement ageโshe who lives longer should work longerโand by reducing benefits for wealthy folks who donโt need them. Boo-ya.
Or how about having the wealthy pay the same percentage of their income in Social Security as the rest of us? Right now, those who make more than $90,000 a year donโt pay Social Security tax on anything more than the $90,000. If youโre a corporate exec pulling in a modest $300,000 a year, $210,000 of that money is exempt from Social Security deductions. How is that fair to the guy who makes $30,000 a year and is taxed on every penny?
โYour money will grow, over time, at a greater rate than anything the current system can deliver.โ
Trash: Try telling this to Chilean worker Dagoberto Saez, 66, interviewed by The New York Times recently. Chile privatized its pension system in 1982, during the authoritarian regime of Gen. Augusto Pinochet. Saez signed on. After 24 years of contributing 10 percent of his pay to the private plan, his pension will pay out around $315 a month for 20 years. His coworkers, taxed the same amount under the old system, will retire with $700 a month for life. Workers who make less than Saez wonโt pull in the minimum pension of $140 a month.
Bush cites Chileโs plan as a model.
โWeโll make sure the money can only go into a conservative mix of bonds and stock funds. Weโll make sure that your earnings are not eaten up by hidden Wall Street fees. Weโll make sure there are good options to protect your investments โฆ Weโll make sure a personal account cannot be emptied out all at once.โ
Truth: Americansโ reliance on a Father-Knows-Best federal government will not be reduced with private accounts. Caring for our money comes with a cost. Estimates of the cost of Bushโs plan run as high as $15 trillion over the next four decades.
See the investment bankers drool.
