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http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/09/opinion/09krugman.html?pagewanted=print

Published on Monday, May 9, 2005
by the New York Times

The Final Insult
by Paul Krugman

Hell hath no fury like a scammer foiled. The card shark caught marking the
deck, the auto dealer caught resetting a used car's odometer, is rarely
contrite. On the contrary, they're usually angry, and they lash out at
their intended marks, crying hypocrisy.
And so it is with those who would privatize Social Security. They didn't
get away with scare tactics, or claims to offer something for nothing. Now
they're accusing their opponents of coddling the rich and not caring about
the poor.

Well, why not? It's no more outrageous than other arguments they've tried.
Remember the claim that Social Security is bad for black people?

Before I take on this final insult to our intelligence, let me deal with a
fundamental misconception: the idea that President Bush's plan would
somehow protect future Social Security benefits.

If the plan really would do that, it would be worth discussing. It's
possible - not certain, but possible - that 40 or 50 years from now Social
Security won't have enough money coming in to pay full benefits. (If the
economy grows as fast over the next 50 years as it did over the past
half-century, Social Security will do just fine.) So there's a case for
making small sacrifices now to avoid bigger sacrifices later.

But Mr. Bush isn't calling for small sacrifices now. Instead, he's calling
for zero sacrifice now, but big benefit cuts decades from now - which is
exactly what he says will happen if we do nothing. Let me repeat that: to
avert the danger of future cuts in benefits, Mr. Bush wants us to commit
now to, um, future cuts in benefits.

This accomplishes nothing, except, possibly, to ensure that benefit cuts
take place even if they aren't necessary.

Now, about the image of Mr. Bush as friend to the poor: keep your eye on
the changing definitions of "middle income" and "wealthy."

In last fall's debates, Mr. Bush asserted that "most of the tax cuts went
to low- and middle-income Americans." Since most of the cuts went to the
top 10 percent of the population and more than a third went to people
making more than $200,000 a year, Mr. Bush's definition of middle income
apparently reaches pretty high.

But defenders of Mr. Bush's Social Security plan now portray benefit cuts
for anyone making more than $20,000 a year, cuts that will have their
biggest percentage impact on the retirement income of people making about
$60,000 a year, as cuts for the wealthy.

These are people who denounced you as a class warrior if you wanted to tax
Paris Hilton's inheritance. Now they say that they're brave populists,
because they want to cut the income of retired office managers.

Let's consider the Bush tax cuts and the Bush benefit cuts as a package.
Who gains? Who loses?

Suppose you're a full-time Wal-Mart employee, earning $17,000 a year. You
probably didn't get any tax cut. But Mr. Bush says, generously, that he
won't cut your Social Security benefits.

Suppose you're earning $60,000 a year. On average, Mr. Bush cut taxes for
workers like you by about $1,000 per year. But by 2045 the Bush Social
Security plan would cut benefits for workers like you by about $6,500 per
year. Not a very good deal.

Suppose, finally, that you're making $1 million a year. You received a tax
cut worth about $50,000 per year. By 2045 the Bush plan would reduce
benefits for people like you by about $9,400 per year. We have a winner!

I'm not being unfair. In fact, I've weighted the scales heavily in Mr.
Bush's favor, because the tax cuts will cost much more than the benefit
cuts would save. Repealing Mr. Bush's tax cuts would yield enough revenue
to call off his proposed benefit cuts, and still leave $8 trillion in
change.

The point is that the privatizers consider four years of policies that
relentlessly favored the wealthy a fait accompli, not subject to
reconsideration. Now that tax cuts have busted the budget, they want us to
accept large cuts in Social Security benefits as inevitable. But they
demand that we praise Mr. Bush's sense of social justice, because he
proposes bigger benefit cuts for the middle class than for the poor.

Sorry, but no. Mr. Bush likes to play dress-up, but his Robin Hood costume
just doesn't fit.

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