Johnston writes: "Which federal program took in more than it spent last year, added $95 billion to its surplus and lifted 20 million Americans of all ages out of poverty?"
Opponents of Social Security are trying to scare seniors. (photo: ssa.gov)
Social Security Is Not Going Broke
05 May 12
hich federal program took in more than it spent last year, added $95 billion to its surplus and lifted 20 million Americans of all ages out of poverty?
Why, Social Security, of course, which ended 2011 with a $2.7 trillion surplus.
That surplus is almost twice the $1.4 trillion collected in personal and corporate income taxes last year. And it is projected to go on growing until 2021, the year the youngest Baby Boomers turn 67 and qualify for full old-age benefits.
So why all the talk about Social Security “going broke?” That theme filled the news after release of the latest annual report of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Federal Disability Insurance Trust Funds, as Social Security is formally called.
The reason is that the people who want to kill Social Security have for years worked hard to persuade the young that the Social Security taxes they pay to support today's gray hairs will do nothing for them when their own hair turns gray.
That narrative has become the conventional wisdom because it is easily reduced to a headline or sound bite. The facts, which require more nuance and detail, show that, with a few fixes, Social Security can be safe for as long as we want.
Shifting Tax Burdens
Let's look at how Social Security taxes have grown in the last half century - a little-known tale of tax burdens shifted off the rich and onto workers. From 1961 through 2011, the year covered in the last Social Security report, Social Security taxes exploded from 3.1 percent of Gross Domestic Product to 5.5 percent.
Income taxes went the other way. The personal income tax slipped from 7.8 percent of the economy to 7.3 percent, with most of the decline enjoyed by people in the top 1 percent of incomes. The big drop was in the corporate income tax, which fell from 4 percent of the economy to 1.2 percent. Notice that the corporate income tax fell by 2.8 percentage points, an amount almost entirely offset by a 2.4 percentage point increase in Social Security taxes.
The effect has been to ease the taxes of the wealthy, while burdening the vast majority of workers. Considering how highly ownership of stocks is concentrated, the benefit of those lower corporate taxes went overwhelmingly to the top 1 percent and, especially, the top 1 percent of the top 1 percent. Considering that the Social Security tax is capped, most of the burden of the increased payroll tax went to the bottom 90 percent.
Now let's look at how that $2.7 trillion Social Security surplus arose. In 1983, President Ronald Reagan sponsored an increase in Social Security taxes, changing the program from pay-as-you-go to collecting much more taxes than it paid in benefits. The idea was to have the Boomers prepay part of their old age benefits. The extra tax was supposed to pay off the federal debt and then be invested in federal bonds. Instead, Reagan ran huge deficits, violating his 1980 promise to balance the federal budget within three years of taking office.
Financing Tax Cuts
In my view, building the Social Security surplus has had two major effects.
One effect was to finance tax cuts for those at the top, whose highest tax rate fell during the Reagan years from 70 percent to 28 percent, and for corporations, whose rate fell from 50 percent of profits to 35 percent. Those with less subsidized those with more.
The other effect was a huge increase in consumer debt, as Americans saddled with higher Social Security taxes took out loans to cover other needs. Stagnant wages played a role, but the $2.7 trillion Social Security surplus is also a factor in a $1.5 trillion increase in consumer debt since 1984.
It is no wonder consumers have gone into debt. Paying a tax in advance is expensive. Indeed, the first lesson in tax planning is that a tax deferred for 30 years is effectively a tax avoided, provided the money is invested wisely. The reverse is also true. A dollar of tax paid in 1984 cost $2.20 in today's dollars, and that's before counting the interest that could have been earned.
With the coming bulge in retirees, Social Security will start to pay out more than it takes in 2021, according to projections in the latest annual report. Under current law the program would be able to pay only about three-quarters of promised benefits starting in 2033. But that scenario can easily be avoided through a combination of four policy changes that would ensure full benefits continue to be paid, though I fear Congress will continue to do nothing.
One would be restoring the Reagan standard that 90 percent of wages are covered by the Social Security tax, which now applies to only 83 percent of wages. If we went back to the Reagan standard, the Social Security tax would apply to close to $200,000 of wages this year instead of $110,100.
Two would be raising the Social Security tax rate by two percentage points. That tax hike could be smaller or even avoided if, three, we reignited the growth in wages. Median wages have fallen in 2010 back to the level of 1999. And, four, it would help just as much if we created millions more jobs, which since 2000 have grown at only a fifth the rate of population increases.
Under current tax rules, the Social Security shortfall for the next 75 years is $8.6 trillion.
But there is a much bigger problem that needs our attention. If we continue national security spending at current levels, with no future increases, the total cost would be $63 trillion, based on the figures in President Barack Obama's latest budget. Unlike spending on Social Security, much of the national security spending goes overseas. And that makes us worse off.
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It is a mistake to think of Social Security as a "tax." The money does not go to the government. It is money that you are saving for your own retirement, PROTECTED by the government from inflation mostly, and from bad days on the stock market.
Living in retirement is expensive, hence the tax that is not a tax is expensive.
And the excess the boomers paid in did not get stolen. It got borrowed as all save money gets borrowed, and it will be paid back for the boomers retirement.
Johnson appears to want "the rich" to pay for your retirement. If the rich pay for it, they will own it, and you will have to literally go on your hands and knees begging them for enough to live on.
FDR understood this. That's why you pay for your own Social Security. It is not welfare. It is your money for your own retirement. Don't let either the bad guys steal it, or the good guys turn you into welfare queens. You won't like either.
You can pay for the rising cost of Social Security yourself by increasing the payroll tax one half of one tenth of one percent per year... about forty cents per week each year. but you have to tell the Congress or you'll get benefit cuts or welfare. see http://www.signon.org/sign/fix-social-security-with/
It had to be that way or instead of starting to pay out in 1941 Social Security would have paid full benefits to no one until the 1960s. The reason the first paymnets caame in 1941 instead of 1935 was that the government chse to build up the trust fund for six years as a precaution.
Social security was set up to HELP people. Social security HAS helped people into old age, and if it were not for social security and medicare, thousands of people would be in the streets or dead.
If the government sucks money out of these systems and then turns around and blames social security and medicare (oh, and the post office) for being improperly run, BLAME THE GOVERNMENT!
Referring to whom?
All I can say is, from bitter experience since the crash-depressio n caused by the same big-money speculators and those who would work to decimate the Social Security that I've paid into all my US working life, much of it as "Self-employmen t tax"-and who were the direct causes of my own fifteen-year and fairly prosperous business goin' to the dogs (along with the marvelous and criminal medical non-system), that my wife and I'd be out on the street right now had we not claimed early S.S., which pays our mortgage and some basic expenses, while we try and repair and rebuild a new business.
I'm not and never have been the type to sit around, collect and do nothing as long as I'm capable of being productive, creative and contributory but I'm glad to have been obliged to put a certain amount of my earning eggs in an accountable and regularly reported on federally-admin istered program, than bet it in an exploitative and greed-based stock market 401K and so on (my wife did this and lost a bundle to her broker and his gambler-specula tors) such as those winner-take-all glorified bookies wish to do with S.S. as something that truly reveals their methods of "Investment" for the Ponzi-schemer's they are.
All THEY want is EVERYTHING!
What a waste. And they are stealing from Social Security.
YES! I waited in vain for Johnston to recommend lifting the "Cap" on SS contributions, but he never even mentioned it. Everyone who pays in to SS draws full benefits if they do not retire early. So what warped logic says that part of their income while they are working should be exempt from SS? It makes no sense at all. Abolish the cap on earnings and require the wealthy, who won't ever need SS to begin with but who will get it anyway, to pay in on their TOTAL earnings!
If Social Security Insurance is a Ponzi scheme, then all insurance is a Ponzi scheme. Unlike most insurance however, Social Security benefits are guaranteed to anyone who qualifies, regardless of need (ie. sickness or poverty).
How to fully fund it past 2033? Currently, Social Security "premiums" are only paid on the first $110,100 of taxable income. If one makes more, they pay nothing on any higher income. Social Security could be fully funded forever by simply requiring payments on all taxable income.
Social Security changed the dynamic. It created a system where everyone could help those who reached their 65th birthday and could no longer work. (Note that when the system was created most people did NOT live much beyond their 65th birthday!) It would help with basic subsistence; it did not necessarily support individuals in a life style of luxury.
I cannot confirm this, however, I strongly believe that if the base for Social Security was increased in relation to the inflation rate, much as a cost of living increase was legislated for the system, then we probably would not have these perennial rhetorical debates!
1. The author claims that people who want to kill SS are propagating false claims of its insolvency as a means to that end. How misleadingly backward! NO ONE wants to "kill" SS. The more mathematically competent of society simply want to transform it into something that's economically sustainable.
2. The implied motive for wanting to "kill" SS then appears to be pure malice? There is, in fact, no malice on EITHER side of the debate. The accusation of malice is invariably just as a means of hiding a lack of content on the accusers part.
3. The author tries to make a case for SS unfairly burdening the non-wealthy, but then proposes increasing the SS tax rate (on these same non-wealthy). And we would do this as a means to avoid the impending bankruptcy which the article's main thesis asserts isn't going to happen anyway.
4. The bigger picture is, as usual, avoided: The fact is that every penny of the SS "fund" is in the form of govt debt, and the level of federal debt is insurmountable. That our govt will eventually have no choice but to renege on billions (or even trillions) of debt is a virtual mathematical certainty.
The solvency of Social Security becomes a moot point if the entity administering it becomes, itself, insolvent.
So give yer money to Wall Street and Co. and watch them get rich while YOU become insolvent!
DO enjoy paying your share of the national debt accumulated by military adventurism, illegal invasions, huge embassies, no-bid contracts, and war games, the unaccountable and uncounted CIA Black Budget, bail outs to big banks and socialism to well-connected corporations, big Pharma, Insurance, the NEW "Safe" Nuclear and "Clean" coal industries and their lobbyists, prison construction, industrializati on and privatization.
S.S. isn't a tithe of all that and you and y'r great-grandwean s will be payin' for the duration of y'r existences for it.
Add your own corporate tax-funded cause to taste but please don't try to rationalize and analyze it all to justify pissing on the little we of the submerged many can still lay hands on -you might be glad of it some day!
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