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Dean Baker

Dean Baker

Posted: January 21, 2011 12:54 PM

That is the question that supporters of Social Security should be asking as we brace for President Obama's State of the Union address next week. Specifically, the question is whether Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will keep up his spirited defense of Social Security or whether he will buckle to the pressure from the financial industry and the Washington insiders.

For those who missed it, Senator Reid distinguished himself by saying the obvious on one of the Sunday talk shows two weeks ago. He said that Social Security is not contributing to the deficit and that the shortfall it faces is still distant and relatively minor. He said he was tired of people picking on this program, which is vital to the financial security of tens of millions of retirees and disabled workers and their families.

Truth is rare in Washington, so Senator Reid's comments really stood out. If the senator is prepared to hold his ground, he can save the program.

There is no doubt that the forces arrayed against Social Security are enormously powerful. The wealthy hate the idea of government money going to anyone but them, and since the vast majority of Social Security benefits are going to low and middle-income families, the program is an outrage to their sensibilities.

The financial industry also knows a cash cow when they see one. It would take more than $10 trillion in private accounts to generate the same amount of money as Social Security pays out each year in benefits. If the financial industry collected just 1.0 percent of this sum in fees each year, it would mean another $100 billion a year into the coffers of the Merrill Lynch set.

And, for anti-government conservatives, Social Security is the worst nightmare imaginable: a government program that really works. Its administrative costs are less than one-tenth as high as they are for financial industry. There is minimal fraud and the program does exactly what it was supposed to do: provide a core retirement income and protect workers and their families against disability and early death.

For these reasons, it is inevitable that powerful forces would be looking to ax Social Security. Much of the media, led by the Washington Post (a.k.a. Fox on 15th Street), have abandoned rules of objectivity in their quest to paint Social Security as a basket case.

The most common tactic is to lump Social Security in with Medicare and Medicaid as "entitlements" that will break the budget. Of course, every budget expert knows that the vast majority of the projected increase in spending comes from Medicare and Medicaid due to exploding health care costs, not the modest impact that aging has on projected Social Security benefits.

Peter Peterson, everyone's favorite Wall Street billionaire, has committed much of his fortune to gutting the program. He is buying everything in sight to advance this goal. This includes setting up a new foundation, paying for scary anti-Social Security documentaries, setting up a fake news service (the "Fiscal Times"), sponsoring rigged public forums (America Speaks), and even playing silly games on the mall.

Can Senator Reid stand up to this massive push?

Well, Mr. Reid has two things on his side: public opinion and the truth. As far as public opinion, there is no doubt that Social Security is a hugely popular program. Everyone loves the security that it provides them, their parents, or their grandparents, and their children. Its sky-high approval rating is across the board with all demographic groups and spans the political spectrum from progressive Democrats to Tea Party Republicans.

The truth is also on Reid's side. One only has to read the Social Security Trustees Report to see that the program will be fully funded for the next 27 years even with no changes at all. After that date, it would still be able to pay almost 80 percent of scheduled benefits indefinitely, even if nothing were ever done. Furthermore, it is not difficult to find progressive ways to make up the remaining shortfall. Just raising the payroll tax cap to where the Greenspan commission set it in 1983 makes up more than one-fourth of the projected shortfall.

The fixes proposed by the Social Security cutters would involve real pain, some of it longer term and some of it very immediate. Most notable is their proposal to reduce the annual cost of living by 0.3 percentage points. After ten years, this would reduce retirees' benefits by close to 3 percent, after twenty years the reduction would be 6 percent. This would be a big hit to many seniors who are surviving on less than $20,000 a year.

The longer-term plans call for making the program more "progressive." This generally means cuts for people who earned $50,000 or $60,000 a year in their working lifetime. That's better than the typical worker, but it doesn't fit most people's conception of rich.

What is so frustrating in this story is that we are not a poor country and are not getting poorer. There is plenty of money out there, if our politicians ever had the courage to confront the rich and powerful. We could easily raise more than $150 billion a year from taxing Wall Street with a financial speculation tax.

We could save as much on prescription drugs if we started having them sold in a competitive market and adopted a more efficient mechanism for financing drug research. And, we could have the Federal Reserve Board hold the bonds it is now buying so that taxpayers are not burdened with hundreds of billions a year in additional interest payments to the wealthy in future decades.

These are items that we would be discussing if the political system were not so dominated by moneyed interests. So, in this context does Senator Reid have a chance?

Actually he has a very good chance. There is an important precedent for Senator Reid's defense of Social Security. In 1997, President Clinton had reached a deal with Trent Lott, then the majority leader in the Senate, to reduce the annual cost of living adjustment for Social Security. Their deal would have lowered the adjustment by about 1 percentage point annually. After 10 years this would mean that benefits would be almost 10 percent lower and after 20 years they would be close to 20 percent lower.

This plan might have gone through, except for the opposition of Richard Gephardt. At the time, Gephardt was the leader of the Democrats in the House. Even though the Democrats were a minority, everyone knew that if Gephardt spoke out forcefully against this deal, it would create too much political heat to carry it through.

This saved the day. As President Clinton complained at one of the Peter Peterson deficit fests last spring: "I wanted to cut Social Security, but they wouldn't let me."

Let's hope that one day President Obama will be able to make the same complaint.

 
That is the question that supporters of Social Security should be asking as we brace for President Obama's State of the Union address next week. Specifically, the question is whether Senate Majority L...
That is the question that supporters of Social Security should be asking as we brace for President Obama's State of the Union address next week. Specifically, the question is whether Senate Majority L...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mxytsplyk
De gustibus non est disputandum
01:47 AM on 01/24/2011
Bernie can lend him some backbone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cgin
10:26 PM on 01/23/2011
Can Harry be a hero? No, especially if America's corporations don't want him to. We've seen this movie before.
09:50 PM on 01/23/2011
With Pelosi out of power, it's up to Reed. Forget Obama; he is an enabler of gutting Social Security. Someone must run against him in the 2012 Democratic Primary.
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07:29 PM on 01/23/2011
Touch social security and face insurrection
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mjc
Avoid printing any..
12:39 PM on 01/23/2011
Your question is one I have secretly held for a few months now, since the Republicans took control of the House. Cutting or limiting Social Security or Medicare has long been one of the more doctrinaire attacks by the conservative right. But I have the nagging doubt that there are many Democrats who want to get on that "less government" gravy train. Senator Reid has never impressed me as a strong Democrat when it comes to most issues, and Social Security is one of the most cantankerous. Hope he looks at his recent election, the closeness, the bitterness of his opponent and decides to go with the more liberal of his colleagues.
10:55 AM on 01/23/2011
A consumer affairs survey found that 72% of Americans now expect to work through retirement­. 39% say they'll work because they have to, and 33% claim they're going to work because they want to. That leaves 28% who plan to draw Social Security benefits or other retirement benefits.

We have the 2.6 trillion dollar trust fund to use until the jobs come back.

Those 33% who want to work through retirement may find that most will not be physically or mentally able to work forever. The 39% who say they will work because they have to will find their employer may not want them as they get older.

Still, though, it does show that people are not flocking to retire.
08:04 AM on 01/23/2011
GEEEEEESH! Just raise or eliminate the contribution cap and its fixed. I've read some posts that say that this won't work since we would have to eventually pay out the benefits to the new contributors (those earning above $107,000). However, the reason it does work is the system as it is currently set up, pays out in monthly benefits, a much lower percentage of total contributions for higher income workers than it does for lower income workers. Another reason it works is that, historically, about a quarter of contributors die before they get their first check and another quarter die after receiving about 7 years of payouts.
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robert horwitz
04:57 AM on 01/23/2011
As I see it no one has any idea what money is worth. Oh sure one can look at a bill and as an example it may say one, or five, or ten, etc. But what is the stuff really worth? Well way back in the year 1804 the US made what is today known as the Louisiana Purchase. This is a rather sizable parcel of land. At the time it was approx. one third of our Country. The accounts vary but most people seem to agree at the time the cost was approx. fifteen to twenty five million dollars depending how one figures it. I would say that was a pretty good deal. The thing is even in today's down Real Estate market it would be tough to purchase just four knock out Condos in New York City for that amount of money. So Dean, What is money really worth?
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ReadMyLipstick1
It can't be that hard.
09:38 PM on 01/22/2011
Hopefully Mr. Reid will stand by his original commitment regarding Social Security. This article is quite accurate about who benefits from Social Security, as well as just exactly who is against the program. The program has worked in the past, and it was not so many years ago that the SS funds were viable. Regardless of what the government says, particularly the Repubs., the SS program is pretty well run and the information SS maintains in order to calculate benefits is accurate. There are a minimal no. of participants who have trouble with their benefits. If memory serves, GHW Bush was one of the first presidents to really begin dipping into SS funds big time. It would seem that the program, as well as it works, needs to stay in place, and the Senators and Congressmen begin to participate in it, and in fact, turn over what they have accumulated privately in their own special retirement fund, and share in the main retirement program, just like the rest of us. That kind of boost to the program should level the playing field a bit.
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hagagaga
My comments are funnier than yours.
09:08 PM on 01/22/2011
If Social Security gets eliminated and we don't get our money back, I'm gonna try for a class-action lawsuit against Congress.
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eilish
Life ain't like a box of chocolates
06:54 PM on 01/22/2011
What we the people need to do is educate each other about Social Security and how it works. I couldn't believe the numbers on my contact list who didn't realize that Social Security is in a trust fund. Unfortunately, after the 3/4 of the money collected goes out to recipients, the government takes the rest and gives a bunch of IOUs in the form of Treasury bonds.

Send everyone something simple like the link below explaining the myths about Social Security and maybe they won't swallow the Fox News spin that SS is killing us with deficits.

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/RetirementandWills/CreateaPlan/5mythsAboutSocialSecurity.aspx
Eppur Si
One of the majority who are not part of the "99%"
10:46 AM on 01/22/2011
Hey, I've got an idea. Why not take all the money in the social security "trust fund" and use it to buy up Goldman Sachs and all those other monied interests. Then all the profits would come to the government, which could use them to make the social security payments to everyone. The government would get the money instead of the "wealthy." Doesn't that sound like a great, leftist idea? (Psssst, by the way, this is what is known as privitization.)
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Lance Manling
12:36 PM on 01/22/2011
What money?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eilish
Life ain't like a box of chocolates
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eilish
Life ain't like a box of chocolates
06:57 PM on 01/22/2011
How about we just keep paying our SS dollars into the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance Trust Funds and stop the government from pirating the rest and leaving T-bills as collateral.

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/RetirementandWills/CreateaPlan/5mythsAboutSocialSecurity.aspx
10:44 AM on 01/23/2011
I wish the Senate would put a stop to them borrowing any more money. They need to put money being paid into the social security trust in a savings account.
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10:34 AM on 01/22/2011
"Can Harry Be a Hero?" = No, he is Harry after all.
10:29 AM on 01/23/2011
Yes, he can.
09:32 AM on 01/22/2011
What a lot of people don't think about is if they lower or change Social Security than they are going to need to create a lot of new Social programs for the Elderly due to the fact that the Elderly are losing their jobs at a higher rate than younger workers and are less likely to find new jobs, Also there's the fact that a lot of the Elderly can't keep up to the stress & demands of manual labor.
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colgan
Thanks M and D for raising me to think for myself
09:39 AM on 01/22/2011
At what age do you consider a person to be 'elderly'. Tread carefully....LOL.
11:10 AM on 01/22/2011
What makes you think they care?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cayuse
Soaring Eagle, soaring to Spirit from the ego self
09:32 AM on 01/22/2011
IRONY: the use of words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of its literal meaning

New found compromise: Coming together is no different and talking apart. A play on words to take SSA, Bailout Wall Street while not bailing out main street, The roads and bridges will be rebuilt, but only for paying higher interest and not more jobs.

Unprovoked WARS and DRONES to give HOMELAND SECURITY

SAFETY NET for business not people

All this injustice and lack of general welfare of the people as the Constitution STATES. Establish JUSTICE and maintain the GENERAL WELFARE

There is not a loss of WORDS, just a simple loss of MEANING and INTENT TO DEFRAUD