On Tue, 4 Jan 2005 12:01:56 -0600, Gary Denton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Massive Benefit Cuts
> Progress Report
> http://www.americanprogressaction.org/site/pp.asp?c=klLWJcP7H&b=280916
> http://tinyurl.com/56a3p

The New York Times repeats what I have been writing here

Complete editorial
January 10, 2005
For the Record on Social Security

Late February is now the time frame mentioned by the White House for
unveiling President Bush's plan to privatize Social Security. The
timing is no accident. By waiting until then, the president will
conveniently avoid having to include the cost of privatization - as
much as $2 trillion in new government borrowing over the next 10 years
- in his 2006 budget, expected in early February.

In this and other ways, the administration is manipulating information
- a tacit, yet devastating, acknowledgement, we believe, that an
informed public would reject privatizing Social Security. For the
record:

The administration has suggested that it would be justified in
borrowing some $2 trillion to establish private accounts because doing
so would head off $10 trillion in future Social Security liabilities.
It's bad enough that the $10 trillion is a highly inflated figure,
intended to overstate a problem that is reasonably estimated at $3.7
trillion or even considerably less. Worse are the true dimensions of
the administration's proposed ploy, which were made painfully clear in
a memo that was leaked to the press last week. Written in early
January by Peter Wehner, the president's director of strategic
initiatives and a top aide to Karl Rove, the president's political
strategist, the memo states unequivocally that under a privatized
system, only drastic benefit cuts - not borrowing - would relieve
Social Security's financial problem. "If we borrow $1-2 trillion to
cover transition costs for personal savings accounts" without making
benefit cuts, Mr. Wehner wrote, "we will have borrowed trillions and
will still confront more than $10 trillion in unfunded liabilities.
This could easily cause an economic chain reaction: the markets go
south, interest rates go up, and the economy stalls out."

At a recent press conference, Mr. Bush exaggerated the timing of the
system's shortfall by saying that Social Security would cross the
"line into red" in 2018. According to Congress's budget agency, the
system comes up short in 2052; according to the system's trustees, the
date is 2042. The year 2018 is when the system's trustees expect they
will have to begin dipping into the Social Security trust fund to pay
full benefits. If you had a trust fund to pay your bills when your
income fell short, would you consider yourself insolvent?

In suggesting that 2018 is doomsyear, the president is reinforcing a
false impression that the trust fund is a worthless pile of I.O.U.'s -
as detractors of Social Security so often claim. The facts are
different: since 1983, payroll taxes have exceeded benefits, with the
excess tax revenue invested in interest-bearing Treasury securities.
(An alternative would be to, say, put the money in a mattress.) That
accumulating interest and the securities themselves make up the Social
Security trust fund. If the trust fund's Treasury securities are
worthless, someone better tell investors throughout the world, who
currently hold $4.3 trillion in Treasury debt that carries the exact
same government obligation to pay as the trust fund securities. The
president is irresponsible to even imply that the United States might
not honor its debt obligations.

Mr. Bush's reason for ignoring the far more pressing problem of
Medicare while he pursues Social Security privatization is especially
tortured. Over the next 75 years, the mismatch between revenues and
Medicare benefits for doctors' care and prescription drugs is 3.5 to 6
times as much as the shortfall in Social Security, according to the
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The Medicare hospital trust
fund mismatch is two to three times as big. Asked by a reporter last
month why he wouldn't tackle Medicare first, Mr. Bush said that his
administration had already taken on Medicare by pushing through the
$500 billion-plus prescription drug benefit. Drug coverage, he said,
would save money for Medicare by paying for medicine that would
prevent the need for expensive heart surgery. "I recognize some of the
actuaries haven't come to that conclusion yet," he said. "But the
logic is irrefutable."

Logic? That thinking is wishful to the point of being magical.
Medicare is not going to fix itself any more than tax cuts will pay
for themselves. And Social Security is not a crisis for which enormous
borrowing, huge benefit cuts and risky private accounts are a
solution. Rather, it's a financial problem of manageable proportions,
solvable without new borrowing by a combination of modest benefit cuts
and tax increases that could be distributed fairly and phased in over
several decades, while guaranteeing a basic level of inflation-proof
income for life.

It appears that the president and his aides are trying to sow
ignorance to gain support for their flawed privatization agenda.
Lawmakers, policy makers and the American people have to let the
administration know that they know better.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/10/opinion/10mon1.html?ex=1263099600&en=24a380642da9ba1b&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland
http://tinyurl.com/5s3cp

Gary Denton
http://elemming2.blogspot.com
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