America Speaks Back: Derailing the Drive to Cut Social Security and Medicare

by: Dean Baker, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

America Speaks Back: Derailing the Drive to Cut Social Security and Medicare
(Image: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Photos8.com, Hans_van_Rijnberk)

Next weekend will feature another milestone in the drive to cut Social Security and Medicare. The organization America Speaks will be hosting a series of 20 meetings in cities across the country. They will ask the people at these meetings, a cross section of the nation, to come up with proposals for dealing with the country's projected long-term budget deficit.

The way the problem is outlined for these meetings virtually guarantees that most of the participants will opt for big cuts to Social Security and Medicare. The results of this song-and-dance exercise will then be presented to President Obama's fiscal responsibility commission on June 30, which will use it as further ammunition for plans by its co-chairs to gut these programs.

The rigged-deck approach should come as no surprise. America Speaks is largely funded by Peter G. Peterson, the investment banker billionaire, who has been on a decades-long crusade to gut these programs. In recent years, Peterson has redoubled his efforts, committing more than a billion dollars to a wide variety of groups in addition to America Speaks. To advance his agenda, Peterson has even set up a fake news service, the "Fiscal Times." To fill the staff, Peterson's son hired a number of reputable reporters, who were displaced by the collapse of the newspaper industry.

The "Federal Budget 101," the guidebook for the discussion, follows a predictably shoddy path. The book discusses the budget in almost complete isolation from any larger discussion of the economy. There is virtually no discussion of the ways in which the budget fosters growth, for example by funding education, research and infrastructure, nor the way in which the pattern of growth affects the budget.

For example, the booklet never discusses the extent to which the economic mismanagement that allowed the unchecked growth of an $8 trillion housing bubble contributed to the debt that is its central concern. The downturn caused by the resulting economic collapse will eventually add more than $3 trillion to the country's debt, according to the Congressional Budget Office's projections.

The booklet also neglects to point out the extent to which the long-term budget disaster story is driven by our broken health care system. If per person health care costs in the United States were the same as in any other wealthy country, we would be looking at enormous budget surpluses in the long-term, not deficits.

Incredibly, the booklet does not even point out the fact that income is projected to grow over time. The average hourly wage is projected to buy 20 percent more in 2025 (the year for which participants are supposed to design a budget) than it does today. This knowledge might affect how people view things like tax increases. For example, if we know that people will be on average 20 percent richer, we might be less concerned if their tax rate were to rise by one to two percentage points.

The booklet also never mentions the plunge in wealth that older workers have suffered as a result of the collapse of the housing bubble and plunge in the stock market. This has left the bulk of near retirees (those in their late 40s and 50s) facing retirement with almost nothing other than their Social Security and Medicare.

The booklet even gets its basic economics wrong, warning participants at the very beginning that rising deficits can lead to a weaker dollar. In the real econ 101, students learn just the opposite - that budget deficits can jack up interest rates, leading to a stronger dollar. This is how a budget deficit can be tied to a trade deficit - by raising the value of the dollar. A higher dollar makes US exports more expensive to foreigners and imports cheaper for people living in the United States.

People who want to see our trade deficit fall want a lower dollar. Getting the value of the dollar down (not up) is an argument that more serious people would give for a smaller budget deficit. Peterson should have been able to get a better product for his millions.

Finally, it is striking that not a single person connected with this project was among those who warned of the housing bubble before its collapse wrecked the economy. Ostensibly, America Speaks tried to include a diverse range of economists and policy analysts. Yet, in the category of people who recognized the biggest economic disaster of the last 80 years, America Speaks came up completely empty.

To put this in perspective, suppose Peterson had funded this exercise back in 2004, when the housing bubble was already huge, but still at a point where it could have been deflated without devastating the economy. This group would have given us a great discussion of the 2020 deficit, but said nothing about the tsunami that was about to wreck the economy (and send the deficit skyrocketing).

Unfortunately, there is no reason to assume that the America Speaks' crew's understanding of the economy is any better today than it was in 2004. We need more serious analysis than this propaganda exercise as a basis for deciding the fate of essential programs like Social Security and Medicare.

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Dean Baker is a macroeconomist and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC. He previously worked as a senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute and an assistant professor at Bucknell University. He is a regular Truthout columnist and a member of Truthout's Board of Advisers.


Comments

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STOP the Obamanible Bush

STOP the Obamanible Bush Wars and make the Congressional lawbreakers refill the Social Security Trust Fund they STOLE From!



There is always plenty of

There is always plenty of money for wars and bailing out the wealthy.

"Our upside down welfare state is "socialism for the rich, free enterprise for the poor." The great welfare scandal of the age concerns the dole we give rich people."
(William O. Douglas, former U.S. Supreme Court Justice, 1969)



Absolutely. Cut the

Absolutely. Cut the military budget in half. Reinstitute the draft and under no circumstances let anyone dodge military duty just because mommy and daddy have connections.

Tax the hell out of lazy second- and third- generation twits who milk mommy and daddy's bank accounts and use their influential connections to get into good schools and to land cushy jobs. Let them learn how to earn a living honestly like everyone else.

And to those who whine and complain that shutting down BP would cost jobs -- welcome to the real world! I've had to change jobs half a dozen times, twice because I discovered the industry I was in was engaged in unethical activities. Grow the hell up and deal with it!

Oh, and as for BP's stock holders? Let them take a loss. They accepted that risk when they bought the stock. I've lost money on stocks, too. It sucks, but again, grow up and deal with it!



Thanks for an illuminating

Thanks for an illuminating article.
I hope Obama reads it.
Of course, if he does, he'll work it into a speech and then forget it when action is required.



USA is rapidly becoming the

USA is rapidly becoming the private property of a club of a few rich people who invest in lobbying and pay no taxes.

God bless them!



resist

resist



I have yet to hear about

I have yet to hear about raising or eliminating the income cap on SS contributions. How 'bout it Cowardsmen?



Here's a silly idea. Write

Here's a silly idea. Write it into law that for any monies congress votes for war or the military budget an equal amount must be placed into social security and medicare. And, corporations, no matter what kind of business they do or where they are headquartered must pay full taxes if they do business in the United States.



When 5% of the US population

When 5% of the US population controls 90% of the wealth I think you can see where the tax burden lies. But, these 5% do not pay their fair share of income tax. It is shoulder by the ever shrinking middle class.



resistance is futile.

resistance is futile. instead, revolt.



Let me just say that my

Let me just say that my generation was 'asked' to pay double into Social Security, and we did, because it was not optional. Social Security in NOT an entitlement program. It is a forced retirement savings plan, automatically taken out of our paychecks. It is my money and I want every penny of it back.

If Congress and Obama are looking for entitlement programs to cut, I suggest they eliminate the LIFETIME MEDICAL BENEFITS that they enjoy at the expense of the taxpayer, for starters.

And Peter Peterson ,,, Drop Dead Fucker!



Clinton, his good friend

Clinton, his good friend Jamie Dimon and that old friend of both, Peter Peterson are more of a threat to your future than any other terrorist organization. Sure, that sounds a bit over the top, but as a generalization for the average Joe Schmoe, spending the rest of your days "not" fixated on whether you have enough money to survive seems more and more unlikely.



More theatre of the absurd

More theatre of the absurd



the road of comity between

the road of comity between the classes may be coming to a dead end



Dean Baker is working very

Dean Baker is working very hard to keep people from participating in this exercise in grassroots democracy. I don't see any other economists working quite as hard as Mr. Baker to keep people away from this discussion or using such intense scare tactics to "discredit" a process that has yet to take place. I wonder if he feels threatened by the so-called "regular" people of this county gaining some direct say over economic policy. Its true that unemployment is very scary and maybe Mr. Baker is looking for greater job security through intimidation of the masses ..."stay out of his realm of expertise, People!"

It wouldn't be the first time a so-called expert claimed that the rest of us were too slow, too weak, too easily fooled to make good decisions for ourselves.

Let's make decisions, like some folks make clothes - FUBU,
Dianne



At this point we are doing

At this point we are doing all we can so no need for frustration. It will be what it will be. We all know this gentleman is misinformed. He is also playing on peoples fears.

Let's just keep moving forward and believe in what we are doing regardless of their propaganda.



Wouldn't it be nice if

Wouldn't it be nice if everyone who commented here decided to educate themselves in real time by participating in the dialog?



That would be nice!

That would be nice!



I would think the best we

I would think the best we could do would be to take out citizenship in Afghanistan. Lots of money going there for social and infrastructure support.



half the people work for the

half the people work for the govt,the other half work at Wa*ma**, so if you are a senior shop there and support you're self.complex problem simple solution,no brainer hugh



why would anyone believe

why would anyone believe that real wages will increase 20% by 2025?

ok, i honestly don't know about the CBO's record for prediction accuracy, but my personal experience of living in the real world on real wages tells me that real wages aren't going up.

when i consider the kind of school district i can afford to live in, the size of home i can afford to buy, the cost of health insurance, the cost of college education, the cost of a well built car, the cost of spending more on truly drinkable water and more hours on the freeway because the population has risen without accompanying infrastructure improvements and expansion, the skyrocketing amount of cash i'm going to need to actually retire one day, the cost of acceptable quality food (not feed lot cattle and pesticide poisoned strawberriess, etc) -- forget it!

i'll believe the myth of increasing real wages when i see the extra purchasing power in my wallet. until then, i remain a skeptic.

for goodness sakes give me evidence I can believe in, not just a CBO estimate!



Did anyone here ever read

Did anyone here ever read "Logan's Run?" Or even see the movie? How about "Soylent Green," based on "Make Room, Make Room?"

It is my opinion that the day is coming when those who are too old and infirm to make it will be encouraged to "retire" for the good of the younger generation. It will start with benign "right to death" laws and eventually progress into "get out of the way" laws for those unable to produce any good for the State. Of course, these laws will be shaped to meet the religion of the masses; making it alright to die in God's eyes so that your children may live.

Of course, the "elite" will be protected from these laws because they were able to buy their golden tickets with their earlier works in life.

I hope this does not come to pass. But articles like this start my thinking in this direction. I honestly see this as a plausible scenario. And at my age, I can see myself as being one of the first "volunteers" to accept the Big Sleep.