Title: Privatizing
1 Privatizing
Social Security
Fact and Myth
by the King County Democrats Legislative Action
Committee January 2005
2 The Social Security Act is a law that takes
care of human needs U.S. President Franklin D.
Roosevelt January 30, 1882 April 12,
1945 Helen Thomas, Post
Intelligencer, 12/16/2004
3 - After this presentation you should understand
- What is Social Security?
- Fact or myth of the privatization schemes
- How to fight to save the program
- Resources for additional information
4 OBJECTIVE BUSH IS READY TO GAMBLE WITH YOUR
RETIREMENT We want to stop him by
presenting the fact and fantasy of his social
security privatization proposal so you can stand
up and fight against it
5 Social Security Act (SSA) Facts for 2004
- 47.4 million (1 in 6) Americans collected
Social Security benefits
-
- 32.8 million retirees and their dependents
- 7.8 million disabled workers and their
dependents - 6.8 million survivors (widows, widowers and
children) - Approximately 30 of beneficiaries collect
- survivors or disability insurance
- 3 million children are under age 18
beneficiaries -
6 - SSA Facts for 2004 (continued)
- SSA paid out 492 billion in benefits in 2004
- 926 is the average monthly retiree benefit for
2004 - COLA will be 2.7 for 2005, or about 25 a
month for the typical retiree - 90 of Americans 65 and older receive Social
Security benefits - 98 of Americans work in jobs that contribute
to the Social Security Trust Fund (SSTF) - SSTFs annual administration costs are
approximately 1
7 - SSA Financing and Benefit Payments
- FACT
- Social Security benefits are financed through a
dedicated payroll tax. Employers and employees
each pay 6.2 of wages up to a taxable cap of
90,000 (in 2005) into the SSTF - The cap needs to be removed. For example, a
NBA - basketball player earning approximately 10M for
the 82-game season earns 121,957 per game, and
exceeds the cap in the third quarter of the first
game. - Revenue is also received from income taxation
of Social Security benefits and from interest
earnings on the trust fund reserves that are
invested in Treasury bonds
.
8 - SSA Financing and Benefit Payments (continued)
- FACT (continued)
- While Social Securitys taxes fall hardest on
those with lowest incomes, the benefits are
progressive - ü replacing half the earnings of a low wage
worker - ü one-third the income of median wage
earners - ü 24 of the earning of high wage earners
- With lifetime retirement benefits, annual cost
of living increases, and family benefits, Social
Security has come close to eliminating poverty
among the elderly - Nearly 2/3 of seniors rely on SS as their
primary income - source only 2 in 5 receive a pension (WA St
Alliance for Retired Americans fact sheet.)
.
9 - SSA Financing and Benefit Payments (continued)
- FACT (continued)
- Without Social Security, more than 50 of Senior
Citizens would be living in poverty - Women comprise the majority of Social Security
beneficiaries, 58 of all Social Security
recipients at age 65 and 71 of all recipients
by age 85 - Women who qualify for survivor or spousal
benefits know they will be paid as a matter of
law (including those divorces after marriages of
at least 10 years) and without any benefit
reductions to their husbands or ex- husbands
(Congressman Jim McDermott web statement) -
.
10 - SSA Financing and Benefit Payments (continued)
- FACT (continued)
- In nearly 70 years, Social Security has never
missed - a paycheck!
- Social Security is an American success story!
- The real threat to Social Security is
POLITICAL! -
.
11 12 - MYTH SOCIAL SECURITY IS GOING BANKRUPT!
- FACT
- The SSA Trust Fund faces a challenge,
- not a crisis
-
- While increased longevity and reduced worker
contributions are concerns, modest adjustments
will provide trust fund stability -
13 - MYTH SOCIAL SECURITY IS GOING BANKRUPT!
- (continued)
- FACT (continued)
- 2004 SSTF Trustee Report 91 Billion excess in
2005 projected future financing in three stages - 2018 Benefits cost exceeds tax revenue
- 2018 Trust Fund begins to use interest (on
bonds) to pay benefits. Interest expected to be
4 Trillion by 2018 - 2042 Interest on bonds used up payroll tax
only funding at 73 of benefit amount.
(Seattle Times 1/9/05)
14 - MYTH SOCIAL SECURITY IS GOING BANKRUPT!
- (continued)
- FACT (continued)
- The CBO (Congressional Budget Office a
bi-partisan agency) estimates that the SSTF will
be fully solvent for nearly fifty years and will
continue to pay 80 of benefits, if nothing is
done to the system. - The Bush proposal (reducing Social Security
payroll taxes by 2) would move the solvency
date to 2021 - Taking the income cap off of Social Security
payroll taxes would pay for all future
insolvency. (FYI- The Medicare payroll tax is
not capped)
15 - BUSH PROPOSAL
- Allow younger workers to invest 2 of their
Social Security payroll taxes in individual
private investment accounts for someone
earning 35,000 annually that equals 700 per
year (Seattle Times, 12/2/04) - Analysts estimate that it will take 2 Trillion
in transition costs over 10 years to privatize
the system because payroll taxes would plunge
immediately while the governments obligation to
existing retirees would decline slowly - Investment choices would be tightly controlled
by the federal government - May require workers to convert all of their
private - retirement accounts into an annuity at
retirement
16 - ANNUITIES
- Require an annual administration fee to an
insurance - company that averages 10-20
- Are not adjusted for inflation
- Often are not inheritable
- Penalize women
- Women earn 72 cents for every dollar men earn
about 250,000 less in a lifetime to save and
invest - Women who take time out, or work part-time, due
to care-giving responsibilities, have less to
invest
17 - THE DISABLED
- About 16 of Social Security beneficiaries are
disabled workers and their dependents - Three in ten of todays 20 year olds will
become disabled before reaching age 67 (source
SSA) - Current Social Security disability benefits are
calculated using the same formula as retirement
benefits - Annuities are not designed for disabled persons
- If future retirement benefits are cut,
disability benefits would also be reduced unless
the disability program is separated from the
proposed privatization plan - How would investment accounts be structured for
disabled persons? (source Seattle PI,
1/18/2005)
18 - Concerns With Privatization Proposals
- Privatization that is meant to replace Social
Security - benefits is wrong
- Privatization will take approximately 2
trillion from the SSTF in 10 years and move it
into the stock market - Chile privatized its government retirement fund
25 yrs ago. Today, pensioners with private
account receive approximately 50 less than
those who stayed with the old system. (source
Seattle PI , 1/31/2005) -
19 - Concerns With Privatization Proposals (continued)
- Privatization will endanger benefits for
current beneficiaries and would directly cut
benefits by 50 for future retirees -- even for
those who set up private investment accounts - Such a transfer of monies out of the SSTF would
exhaust the SSTF 21 years sooner than currently
projected
20 Concerns With Privatization Proposals (continued)
- Stock market investment is dangerous
- Senator Frist invested his PAC (Political Action
Committee) contributions, also called campaign
money, in the stock market and lost 460,000 in
2004 - An AARP study found that 20 of older Americans
who lost money in the stock market between 2000
and 2002 postponed their retirement dates - The stock market has a history of twenty year
swings. Those who retire when their investment
is on the down side will have less retirement
investment than those who retire at the top of
the curve
21 Concerns With Privatization Proposals (continued)
- Stock market investment is dangerous
(continued)
- Ø Wall Street interests stand to gain
millions in new administration fees under the
Republican proposal. (Every 100 paid in
benefits equals 60 cents in administration fees)
--Dean Baker, Economist Seattle, 12/13/2004 - The beneficiary of the Republican scam is NOT
you, - but the WALL STREET BACKERS (the return to them
is estimated to be as high as 940 Billion). - Seven out of the top ten donors to the Bush
campaign were Wall Street firms
22 Concerns With Privatization Proposals (continued)
- Stock market investment is dangerous
(continued)
Ø Private accounts make no provision for
disability or survivor benefits Ø Annuities
charge high premiums if such benefits are
offered
23 What Others are Saying About Social Security
Privatization
U.S. Senator Lindsay Graham (R- S. Carolina) an
ardent advocate of private accounts, he recently
departed from Bush by suggesting that higher
taxes might be preferable to soaring debt. See
www.graham.senate.gov Robert "Bob" Bynum,
former SSA Deputy Commissioner for Operations and
now a member of the National Committee to
Preserve Social Security and Medicare I hope
that I'm wrong, but I'm convinced that high-level
politicians want to do away with the system and
this is what this privatization talk is all
about. Social Security isn't broken,
congressional and White House studies have found
that, if nothing were done, the Social Security
Trust Fund would have enough money to pay 100
percent of benefits for at least the next 42
years. And if nothing were done, it would still
have enough left beyond that time to pay out 70
percent of benefits.
The Birmingham News 1/1/05
24 What Others are Saying About Social Security
Privatization (continued)
PRIVATIZING SOCIAL SECURITY replacing the
current system, in whole or in part, with
personal investment accounts wont do anything
to strengthen the systems finances. If
anything, it will make things worse. Nonetheles
s, the politics of privatization depend crucially
on convincing the public that the system is in
imminent danger of collapse, that we must destroy
Social Security in order to save it. Theres
nothing strange or mysterious about how Social
Security works Its just a government program
supported by a dedicated tax on payroll earnings,
just as highway maintenance is supported by a
dedicated tax on gasoline Paul Krugman,
Syndicated Columnist December 8, 2004, The
New York Times
25 What Others are Saying About Social Security
Privatization (continued)
Senator Max Baucus (D-MT) whose support was key
to passing Bushs tax cuts and Medicare
legislation, opposes the Presidents Social
Security Plan saying, It would
exacerbate the problem, not solve it.
(Source Washington
State Alliance for Retired Americans Alert,
1/7/2005)
26 Democrats Want
- To receive a detailed proposal from the
President about his privatization plan - To save, strengthen and secure the Social
Security Program. - To work together with Republicans to ensure
that America honors its promise to those who
have worked hard and played by the rules that
all workers are paid the Social Security
benefits they were promised
27 Democrats Want (continued)
-
- To work to reduce the deficit in order to
protect the SSTF. - The 2004 U.S. deficit is 413 billion. It would
have been much higher if the budget had not been
supplemented by more than 200 billion in Social
Security and Medicare trust funds (Seattle
Times, 12/27/2004) - Return to fiscal discipline and strong
pay-as- you-go budget rules (pay for what you
spend rather than borrow) - Restore the 1 trillion in irresponsible tax
breaks that were partially paid for by
borrowing from the SSTF
28 Democrats Want (continued)
- To encourage private savings such as 401k and
IRA accounts without cutting Social Security - To provide clear and unbiased information on
retirement investment options - BUT DEMOCRATS CAN NOT
- Support any plan that relies on massive and
- irresponsible increases in debt that
could destabilize - markets and lead to large tax increases
- Allow citizens to be guinea pigs for a
political experiment -
29 - What You Can Do
- Organize! Ensure that all community, union,
and political organizations are aware of the
fraudulent Republican campaign - Spread the truth! Educate others on the
unacceptable costs of private accounts - --Cuts in guaranteed benefits
- --Unacceptable levels of stock market risk
30 - What You Can Do (continued)
- Challenge the media assumption on the the
crises - Share your Social Security story. Write a
letter to the editor about what it means to you
and its importance to your children and
grandchildren. - Visit/contact your U.S. Senators and
Representatives and let them know you are
against the privatization, in any manner, of
the Social Security Trust Fund.
31 For Social Security is a government program that
works, a demonstration that a modest amount of
taxing and spending can make peoples lives
better and more secure. And thats why the
right wants to destroy it. Paul
Krugman, Syndicated Columnist December 8,
2004, New York Times
32 Appendices
33 Brief history of Social Security
FDR, motivated by his great empathy for
less fortunate Americans, strove to establish
cradle-to-the-grave social security.
Gauging the political winds and taking into
account the prevailing 1930s wisdom about
economic policy, he calculated how much social
security would be accepted by the American
people, the economy, and the political power
brokers, and got the most progressive law anyone
could reasonably have expected in 1935
FDR and
the Origins of Social Security
by Bill Hunot,
Social Security Administration
April 25, 2002
34 - Brief history of Social Security (continued)
- 1929 - U.S. Stock Market crash - millions
of Americans out of work, living in poverty,
standing in bread lines for handouts to feed
their families. President Hoover believed the
situation would correct itself and suggested
charity and voluntary relief efforts
Unemployment rose to 25 and discontent
increased - 1932 - FDR elected by promising a New
Deal that included a Social Security System
based on principles of social insurance
Germany adopted in 1889 - 1934 - Congress passed the Social Security
Act by a margin of 372-33 in the House, 77-6 in
the Senate - 1935 - President Roosevelt signed law.
SSA - 70 yrs old! -
35 - History (continued)
-
- The law also created the federal unemployment
system, the Aid to Families with Dependent
Children Program (AFDC) and now abolished, and
grants to states to pay for medical care - 1937 - first payroll taxes collected
- Lump sums were paid to retirees for the first
few years of the program - 1939 - Spouses and children of retired workers
were added as beneficiaries - 1940 - first monthly benefit (22.54) paid to
Ida May Fuller who lived to be 100 years.
36 - History (continued)
-
- 1950 - Congress authorized a 77 increase to
adjust for higher cost of living - 1956 - disabled workers aged 50-64 added as
beneficiaries - 1961 President Eisenhower removed disability
age requirement and authorized dependents of
disabled workers as beneficiaries - 1965 - SSA administers Medicare which became
law that - year
.
37 - History (continued)
-
- 1970 - SSI (Supplemental Security Income) new
program administered by SSA (SSI, a program for
poor elderly and disabled, is supported from
general tax revenues) - 1975 - annual COLAs authorized
- 1983 - President Reagan reduces benefits
(college-age - dependent children dropped)
- Due to SSTF Trustees increased payroll tax to
12.4, future retirement age to 67, and wage cap
to 90,000 - 1999 - end of paper checks- all directly
deposited into bank accounts
.
38 For Additional Information, Contact AARP
www.aarp.org The Alliance for Retired Americans
www.retiredamericans.org - 206.448.0859 The
Economic Opportunity Institute
www.EIOonline.org - 206.633.6580, Marilyn
Watkins Older Womens League (OWL)
WWW.OWL-NATIONAL.ORG - 206. .781.6679 US
Senator Patty Murray http//www.murray.senate.go
v US Senator Maria Cantwell http//www.cantwell
.senate.gov US Congressman Jim McDermott
www.house.gov/mcdermott - 206.553.7170 US
Congressman Jay Inslee www.house.gov/inslee US
Congressman Adam Smith www.house.gov/adamsmith
UW House of Representatives legislative
information http//thomas.loc.gov/ US
Congressional Budget Office www.cbo.gov Social
Security Administration www.ssa.gov US Senator
Lindsay Graham www.graham.senate.gov KCDCC
http//www.kcdems.org
39 Sources The Seattle Times - 12/12/04,
12/19/04, 12/27/04 The Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- 12/10/04, 12/26/04 The New York Times
12/8/04, 12/30/04 The Tri-City Herald
1/2/05 Dean Baker, Economist Seattle,
12/13/04 OWL letter to President Bush 12/16/04
(see Owl website) The Social Security
Administration The Economic Opportunity
Institute The Alliance for Retired Americans The
Washington State Alliance for Retired Americans
wasara_at_qwest.net US Congressman McDermotts
website US House Budget and Ways and Means
Committee Democratic staff AARP