There's Nothing Wrong With Social Security That Taxing the Rich Fairly Wouldn't Fix
Monday 16 August 2010
by: Dave Lindorff | This Can't Be Happening | Op-Ed
New York Times columnist and economist Paul Krugman, in his column today, is right to expose the attacks on Social Security as being the work of right-wing ideologues eager to destroy a government program that works, backed by cowardly Democrats who want to show their fiscal “responsibility” by getting tough with future pensioners.
But he doesn’t go the extra step to point out that this program, founded 75 years ago as a cornerstone of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, could be much more fair and even generous to elderly and disabled retirees, and also placed on a much sounder economic footing, by a few simple reforms that would not cost most people a penny, or require hard working folks to work one day longer before retiring.
There is a problem facing Social Security, which Krugman doesn’t mention. The Nobel economist is correct that the system has built up a huge multi-trillion-dollar surplus over the years. And he is correct in noting that this surplus--the Trust Fund--is big enough to fund the system probably indefinitely, even during the huge bulge in retirement that is starting now that the Baby Boomer generation is hitting retirement age. What he fails to mention is that the Trust Fund has all been stolen (okay, technically borrowed) by the federal government to fund its own annual deficits, and given the national attitude towards taxes, it will never be repaid. That’s why the right is able to create a panic by falsely claiming that Social Security is going to go “bankrupt” when current workers’ Social Security taxes can no longer pay for the benefits of current retirees.
But there is a simple solution to even this deception, which is to eliminate the cap on income which is subject to the Social Security tax.
At present, every worker in America pays the same percentage of income into the Social Security Trust Fund--currently 6.2% of the first $106,800 of earnings. Since everyone pays at that rate, whether they earn $10,680 a year or $106,800 a year, that would be a flat tax, except that it’s not. Because once someone earns more than $106,800 in a year, the tax rate falls off precipitously. After that cap, which is adjusted upward a little bit each year to account for inflation, there is no SSI tax on additional money earned. In other words, if someone earns $106,800.00, she or he pays $6,621.60 into the Trust Fund, but if that worker earns $107,000, or $313,600 a year, the tax is still just $6,621.60. For the person earning twice the income cap of $313,600, that means an SSI tax rate of only 3.1%. For someone earning 10 times the cap, or $1.068 million, the tax rate is only 0.62%.
Making things even more unfair, if someone were to earn that $106,800, or any other amount, by investing in the stock market, or by investing in real estate, he or she would pay no SSI tax at all, since the tax is only applied to what is called “earned income,” not to investment income.
According to a recent study conducted by the Congressional Budget Office for the Senate Special Committee on Aging, if this income cap for the Social Security tax was eliminated, so that all earned income was taxed, the dreaded wall when current workers’ tax payments ceases to be enough to pay for current retiree benefits, instead of arriving in 2037, would be pushed back to at least 2075, a date almost as distant in the future as today is from the founding of the Social Security program.
Of course, if the tax were applied also and at the same rate to unearned income from investment, not only would there be no Social Security crisis ever, but instead of talking about making people work until they are 70, and about cutting benefits for retirees, we could be talking about lowering the retirement age to 62, and raising benefits, so that people could live decently in retirement instead of worrying that they might have to cut their food intake in order to pay the rent or buy required medications. People could also stop having to lose sleep at night worrying about the destruction of their IRA or 401(k) by the Wall Street banksters. Alternatively, the retirement age could be restored to the original 65, and the tax rate on all workers could be reduced.
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Now people on the right will howl--they are howling now--that it’s unfair to tax the rich on all their income when they will only be collecting a pittance in Social Security benefits for all the money they pay into the system if there is no taxable income cap, but in fact, that’s exactly what has been done in the case of the 1.45% Medicare tax, which is also levied on every worker. That tax is applied to all income earned.
Krugman is also wrong in saying that it is ideologues who are trying to wreck Social Security. The ideologues at places like the Cato Institute and Heritage Foundation are providing the intellectual justification for destroying Social Security, but the real opposition to Social Security, though, is corporate America, as represented by groups like the Business Roundtable and the US Chamber of Commerce (it’s corporate America that funds those foundations and their resident “scholars,” after all). And the reason for this corporate opposition is that Social Security taxes and Medicare taxes paid by workers are both matched, dollar for dollar, by employers. If you pay 6.2% of your income in taxes to the Social Security Administration each year, so does your boss, and if the income cap is lifted for workers it will also be lifted for employers. That means a bigger tax bill for the company, and of course personally for the managers and board members.
So let’s at least be honest in this coming battle over “saving” Social Security. It is nothing less than a war between bosses and workers.
The system is not in trouble because it’s too generous or because it is underfunded. It has been pilfered over the years by politicians who have been unwilling to raise taxes to fund America’s wars, or to fund the programs that we Americans say we want, like better roads, grants for local schools, etc. Instead of telling us what things cost, they borrow (steal) money from the Social Security Trust Fund, and then tell us Social Security is in trouble.
And now, as a day of reckoning approaches, they pretend it’s all our fault. They say we want too much in benefits, or that we want to retire too early. But the truth is, we deserve decent retirement income, and we deserve to retire at 65 or even 62--especially those of us who have slaved away at physically exhausting and destructive jobs for 40 or 50 years. In fact, if we hang onto our jobs until 70 or 72, as these hacks and the lobbyists for corporate American want us to do, it’ll just be that harder for our kids to get jobs and move out of the house!
This is not about a private pension fund that’s going bust. It’s about a public pension program that has been raided, that has never been adequate, and that needs to be bolstered now by a tax on the rich. Nothing elaborate mind you. They just need to pay at the same rate that the rest of us do.
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Comments
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And who really got the ball
Tue, 08/17/2010 - 15:17 — Anonymous (not verified)And who really got the ball rolling in the grand tradition of "borrowing" from Social Security?
Ronald Raygun. Of course.
Sounds wonderful, but a pipe
Tue, 08/17/2010 - 15:20 — mtrav (not verified)Sounds wonderful, but a pipe dream. They'll screw us all before they do the right thing.
And who really got the
Tue, 08/17/2010 - 15:22 — mtrav (not verified)And who really got the ball
Tue, 08/17/2010 - 20:17 — Anonymous (not verified)
And who really got the ball rolling in the grand tradition of "borrowing" from Social Security?
Ronald Raygun. Of course.
The rethug slug who started us down that slippery slope with everything.
Another, simpler solution:
Tue, 08/17/2010 - 19:21 — Loup-bouc (not verified)Another, simpler solution: Stop spending on ILLEGAL wars (like our ILLEGAL invasions of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan) and allocate the would-be war-spending to repaying the money stolen from the Social Security Trust Fund.
Oh the true, total (direct and indirect) cost of the current three invasions is far, far greater than 6.5 trillion, NOT the $1 trillion the government claims. And THAT SQUANDERING explains the deficit.
Greater than $6.5 trillion?
In 2008, Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize winning economist, tendered some estimates of the costs of the Iraq war. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/feb/28/iraq.afghanistan
First just two of Stiglitz’s very conservative estimates of the true DIRECT costs of ONLY the Iraq war:
"$3 trillion
A conservative estimate of the true [DIRECT] cost [other than interest] — to America alone — of Bush's Iraq adventure."
"$1 trillion
The interest America will have paid by 2017 on the money borrowed to finance the war."
Adjust the interest figure to find interest paid till end of 2010:
2003 to 2017 = 14 years
2003 to 2011 = 8 years
8/14 = 57%
57% x $1 trillion = $0.57 trillion
Adjust the $3 trillion Direct cost other than interest to account for time from 2008 through 2010:
2003 to 2011 = 8 years
2003 to 2008 = 5 years
8/5 x $3 trillion = $4.8 trillion
$0.57 trillion interest + $4.8 trillion other DIRECT cost other than interest = $5.37 trillion.
I acknowledge that the 2008 through 2010 direct cost other than interest might need adjustment that accounts for spending’s deviating from what it was from 2003 to 2008. But, the adjustment would push the cost figure up, because the US had ADDED troops in 2007 and the troop addition did not cut violence appreciably and even increased it eventually. So, I shall not bother to render an adjustment.
So, per Stiglitz’s accounting, had we not invaded Iraq, we would have saved $5.37 trillion by 2011. Subtract $5.37 trillion from the $1.4 trillion deficit the government asserts and find a SURPLUS of $3.97 trillion.
Invest say 1/6 of 1/4 of $5.37 trillion (or $0.22 trillion) in the Social Security Trust Fund. The Fund would be solvent and, with interest drawn on Treasury bonds, grow to the needed size.
See also http://nationalpriorities.org/auxiliary/costofwar/cost_of_war_afghanistan.pdf [apparently published or completed in April 2009] again respecting the Iraq war’s cost. In that piece, Stiglitz calculates that as of April 2009, the past, current, and projected DIRECT costs totaled $3.1831 trillion:
"• The Iraq War has cost $656.1 billion in budgetary costs
so far, with another $52.7 billion pending as part of the
FY 2009 war supplemental
"• At least $2 trillion in future budgetary costs (including
Veterans’ benefits) will be spent"
See also
http://threetrilliondollarwar.org/2010/08/06/iraq-troops-go-home-on-schedule-but-costs-of-iraq-war-continue/
[which put Iraq war DIRECT costs at more than $3 trillion even if Obama redeploys US Iraq-war troops by December 2011]
But those are DIRECT costs, not the myriad indirect costs. Just ONE indirect cost comprises ALL the NONmilitary, domestic economic effects (including domestic consequences of international effects) of US military petroleum-use associated in ANY WAY with prosecution of the wars.
Since 2001, the US military has been the world’s single greatest user of petroleum and has used petroleum at a per capita rate greater than the per capita usage rate of whole great nations, like China, even greater than the whole of Africa.
http://energybulletin.net/node/13199
http://newlaunches.com/archives/top_5_facts_on_us_military_oil_consumption.php
See also http://peak-oil-news.info/military-oil-usage-statistics/
http://planetgreen.discovery.com/tech-transport/planet-biggest-gas-guzzler.html
The oil-use-related indirect effects are not just gasoline-price effects, but lost opportunities ande activity-choice-limitations and unemployment increases associated with either or both petroleum prices or petroleum-product-supply shortages and the consequent loss of tax revenues.
Add JUST deduction of the utterly unreal Congressional Research Service accounting of DIRECT OUTLAYS of the AFGHAN war, and find a much greater surplus. See, E.G., http://costofwar.com/ which uses Congressional Research Service accounting to calculate the Afghan war’s DIRECT OUTLAY (irrespective of debt-interest and other DIRECT costs) as $325 billion as of today, 17 August 2010.
Another analysis observes:
"The War in Afghanistan has cost U.S. Tax payers $185.1 billion through FY 2009, and the projected costs are likely to total MORE THAN HALF A TRILLION DOLLARS when future occupation and veteran’s benefits are taken into account. This DOES NOT INCLUDE INTEREST ON THAT MONEY."
http://gobnf.org/i/ra/economic_costs.pdf
[My emphases.]
Assume the $0.5 trillion that source estimates. Assume the 33.3% interest Stiglitz applies to the Iraq war debt. Then, as of 2009, the interest was $0.5 trillion x 0.333 = $0.1665 trillion. Forget 2010 and 2011 interest, just to simplify. Then, as of 2009, the Afghan war’s DIRECT and DIRECT PROJECTED cost was $0.6665 trillion.
Add that cost to the Iraq war cost I calculated on the premises Stiglitz supplied. The total is $6.0365 trillion, IF the calculation accounts the Iraq war’s DIRECT costs through 2010 but accounts the Afghan war’s cost only as of 2009.
My figure — $6.5 trillion — assumes only a 2010 additional direct outlay of a bit more than #46 billion. Already, Congress has appropriated more than that amount in 2010. My figure DOES NOT include an estimate of any INDIRECT costs. But surely the INDIRECT costs will at least equal the DIRECT costs (of at least $6.5 trillion).
Note also that my figures DO NOT include ANY accounting of the cost of US drone attack invasions of Pakistan.
But see
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?aid=16646&context=va
which presents, for the Iraq and Afghan wars (but not the Pakistan invasions), a DIRECT cost figure of $3.076 trillion.
Note, however: Even if that figure were correct, it would be virtually three times the deficit calculated this year. Surely, using the same accounting method and kinds of variables, if that source accounted the Pakistan invasions’ costs, it would present a figure that would make the three-invasions’ costs more than three times the deficit.
Why should our taxes be
Thu, 08/19/2010 - 13:47 — Liz (not verified)Why should our taxes be used, either through another tax or redirecting money from the wars, to bail out a fund created from our taxes? If we have to create the fund, then replace the stolen money, doesn't that raise our FICA tax to over 12% in a way?
We have to remember that governments don't have money of their own. Neither do corporations. All they have is OURS. We need a voice in how its spent.