August 2010
The Real Solution to Social Security Insolvency
As
this is written, in August 2010, the Social Security system is running a
deficit. Its ability to support future retirement benefits for Americans is
rapidly withering away. Fixes have been offered, but they all center in on
postponing the inevitable: neither higher taxes nor cuts in benefits will save
the system from its demise. Those methods have been tried before and failed.
Unsurprisingly,
this truth has not yet set in everywhere. Many still offer regurgitated
versions of the same old “fixes”. One example is the Peter G Peterson
Foundation’s plan, which was presented by Lowell Kalapa in the Hawaii Reporter
on August 3.
The
Peterson plan essentially combines higher taxes with benefit cuts, thus
representing a concentrate of a half-century long stretch of “fixes” during the
latter half of the 20th century.
Instead
of repeating old mistakes it is time for America to face the hard truth: the government
cannot provide us with sustainable retirement security. In the case of Social
Security this is manifested in three flaws.
· First, it does not save your taxes for your
retirement, but uses them to pay other people’s retirement. All you get is an IOU
from the government.
· Secondly, the IOUs that one generation accumulates
over time will by necessity always exceed what the average working American can
pay in taxes, at a given tax rate. As a result, Congress needs to repeatedly
cut benefits or raise taxes, or both.
· Third, the Social Security system was constructed at a
time when economic growth was much higher than it has been the last few
decades. It was designed for a different kind of American economy, one with
much smaller government and economically more free citizens and businesses.
As
a result of its inherent flaws, Social Security has become a perpetual problem
for the president and Congress since 1950 when they raised the Social Security
tax for the first time. Over the next half-century Congress raised the Social
Security tax another 19 times and made numerous adjustments to erode benefits.
And Social Security still is not solvent – on the contrary, its future is more
precarious than ever.
It
is not enough to match the current system with a small system of private
accounts. Nor is it enough – or even desirable – to raise the taxes and cut
benefits in the current system. Small private accounts in today’s system will
not address the second flaw mentioned above, and higher taxes with lower benefits
will only save Social Security when everyone is a taxpayer and no one is a
beneficiary.
There
is but one sustainable solution to the problem that Social Security represents.
Only a complete phase-out of the current system, and a complete phase-in of private
accounts, will provide the sustainable retirement solution we all need and
want.
In
a model currently being developed at the Wyoming Liberty Group, private
accounts will be phased in gradually over a long period of time. The current
system will have obligations to honor for decades, and will need cash until the
last entitlement is paid out. At the same time, a gradual phase-in of private
accounts will allow the financial industry to gradually develop responsible
investment products to care for people’s retirement savings.
Private
accounts are better because they shore up our own money and can be invested
against an annual return. Those in most urgent need of the financial safety
that private accounts provide are low-income families. Therefore, the Wyoming
Liberty Group model suggests a phase-in strategy that has a bias in favor of
low-income families.
Privatizing
Social Security is not easy, but a slow, steady phase-in of private accounts
combined with a low-income bias secures a stable, predictable transition out of
a flawed government system and in to a properly managed, responsible private
system. It will take up to 30 years before private accounts have completely
replaced the government system, but it is worth the long stretch.
It
will also take a tremendous amount of political fortitude and bipartisanship, both
of which are all too absent in today’s politics. At the same time, our elected
officials in Washington, DC have summoned enormous fortitude and bipartisanship
to maintain the current system, which is full of flaws and constantly heading
for insolvency. It is only fair to expect similar commitments behind a
privatization reform.
Dr. Larson is a Research Fellow with the
Wyoming Policy Group, a free-market think tank in Cheyenne, Wyoming. He wrote
this piece for the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, www.grassrootinstitute.org.
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