Douglas Holtz-Eakin September 16, 2019
Eakinomics: The
Future of Social Security
Social Security is
a critical component of the safety net. It provides inflation-adjusted
retirement income for as long as a beneficiary survives (a real annuity),
provides a greater replacement rate of lifetime wages for low-wage workers than
high-wage workers (i.e., is progressive in the distributional sense of that
word), and has proven to be a stellar anti-poverty program for the elderly. Its
importance is reflected by its special budgetary treatment — the federal
government pretends that payroll taxes (currently 12.4 percent of wages) are
deposited into a retirement trust fund and pretends that retirement benefits
are paid out of the trust fund. In reality, cash simply flows into and out of
the Treasury, but the trust fund fiction dictates that benefits can only be
paid as promised if there is enough combined money from payroll taxes and the
trust fund.
By 2033
this will no longer be the case. The trust fund will be empty and benefits will
be dictated by the funds available from payroll taxes – requiring a decline of
nearly 25 percent. Will Congress change Social Security to avert this decline
in retirement income? Who knows. This uncertainty means that Social Security
has morphed from a program designed to reduce income uncertainty into a source
of that uncertainty.
Elizabeth
Warren has proposed recently to
reform Social Security. She begins, however, by immediately making the
financial problem worse:
·
“Increases Social Security benefits immediately by $200 a month –
$2,400 a year – for every current and future Social Security beneficiary in
America.
·
Updates outdated rules to further increase benefits for
lower-income families, women, people with disabilities, public-sector workers,
and people of color.”
Now, it
is not crazy to contemplate some benefits increases, yet they are typically not
across-the-board but focused on the minimum benefit and support for the most
aged. But having done so, how do you solve the imbalance between promises and
cash to make good on them? One approach would be to acknowledge that the most
affluent have no need for regular Social Security benefits, or even Social
Security benefits at all. This would mean cutting back on benefits to the
affluent to bring the program into balance. But for some reason the left thinks
it is “fairer” to raise $1 of taxes on the affluent (which would have damage to
economic incentives on top of lowering the deficit by $1) than to cut $1 of
benefits (which would improve economic incentives in addition to lowering the
deficit by $1).
So,
naturally, Warren proposes, “First, my plan imposes a 14.8% Social Security
contribution requirement on individual wages above $250,000 – affecting less
than the top 2% of earners – split equally between employees and employers at
7.4% each. Second, my plan establishes a new 14.8% Social Security contribution
requirement on net investment income that applies only to the top 2% –
individuals making more than $250,000 in annual income or families making more
than $400,000 in annual income.”
In the
end, this is simply old-school, tax-and-spend fiscal policy dressed up as
Social Security reform. And in other cases, it doesn’t even do much
for Social Security. On Friday the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released
its analysis of the Social Security 2100
Act (H.R. 860). The bill would “increase Social Security benefits for
most recipients, change the measure used to determine cost-of-living
adjustments (COLAs), increase the minimum benefit for some new
recipients with low lifetime earnings, and include earnings above $400,000 in
the benefit formula. The bill also would increase revenues by gradually
raising the payroll tax rate and subjecting earnings
above $400,000 to the payroll tax.” So, it is the same basic game
plan of raising spending and high-income taxes.
What’s
the hitch? The Social Security 2100 Act extends the life of the trust fund only
until 2041. A trillion dollars of taxes buys only 8 years; it does not
eliminate the uncertainty facing seniors and near-retirees. Real reform is not
over-promising (again) to retirees and damaging the economy with ever-higher
taxes. Real reform is putting Social Security on a sustainable financial path, taking
care of vulnerable seniors, and doing so in an economically and fiscally
responsible fashion.
https://www.americanactionforum.org/daily-dish/the-future-of-social-security/#ixzz5zslBHy00
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