Does President Obama Want to Cut Social Security by 3 Percent? by Dean Baker

That is a pretty simple and important question. Unfortunately most
voters are likely to go to the polls this fall without knowing the
answer.

If the backdrop to this question is not immediately clear, then you
should be very angry at the reporters who cover the campaign. One of
the items that continuously comes up in reference to the budget
deficit is President Obama’s support for the plan put forward by the
co-chairs of his deficit commission, Morgan Stanley director Erskine
Bowles and former Senator Alan Simpson. On numerous occasions
President Obama has indicated his support for this plan.

One of the items in the Bowles-Simpson plan is a reduction in the
annual cost-of-living adjustment of roughly 0.3 percentage points.
This would be accomplished by using a different index that, by design,
would show a lower measured rate of inflation. It is important to
recognize that this is an annual cut that would accumulate over time.
After a retiree has been receiving benefits for 10 years the cut would
be 3.0 percent, after 20 years it would be 6 percent. If a typical
retiree lives long enough to get benefits for 20 years the average
benefit cut over their years of retirement would be 3 percent.

This is the most immediate cut to Social Security in the
Bowles-Simpson plan but not the only one. The plan also would
gradually raise the age at which retirees receive full benefits to 69.
It also phases in a reduction in benefits for workers whose earnings
averaged more than $40,000 a year over their working lifetime.

When President Obama indicates his support for the Bowles-Simpson
plan, he is indicating his support for all of these measures. Of
course he is not required to accept the plan in its entirety, but if
he does oppose the cuts that the plan imposes on Social Security it
would be reasonable to expect him to state this explicitly.

In principle this would be exactly the sort of issue where we would
expect reporters to be grilling President Obama and his staff. After
all, while President Obama has been proclaiming his support for the
Bowles-Simpson plan, his vice-president has been assuring the public
that Social Security will not be touched in a second Obama
Administration.

Last month in Virginia, Joe Biden said in the strongest possible terms
that there will be no cuts to Social Security in a second Obama
Administration. He repeated the statement with the additional line
that “I guarantee it.” This would seem to be a pretty clear
contradiction with President Obama’s support for Bowles-Simpson.

The media should be trying to resolve this contradiction. Then voters
could go to the polls knowing whether they are voting for someone who
wants to follow Bowles-Simpson and cut Social Security benefits or
alternatively would pick up the gauntlet thrown down by Vice President
Biden and be a rock solid defender of the program.

One of the reasons that the media may be neglecting its
responsibilities in this situation is that many of them favor the cuts
laid out in the Bowles-Simpson plan. They don’t want to put the Obama
Administration on the spot because they know that Social Security is
hugely popular across the political spectrum. If President Obama were
forced to commit himself on whether he supported cuts to Social
Security before the election he would almost certainly say "no," since
openly supporting cuts could lose him millions of votes.

This sort of attitude was reflected in a recent Washington Post
editorial that endorsed the 3 percent cut in Social Security benefits
by describing it as a “tweak” to the inflation index rather than a cut
in benefits. But it is not the job of the media to conceal the meaning
of policy changes so as to better advance an agenda.

Last week many reporters prided themselves on forcefully asking
President Obama’s surrogates a question handed to them by the Romney
campaign: “Are the American people better off today than they were
four years ago?”

That made for a great clown show, since the economy was in a state of
collapse when President Obama took office four years ago. How is
someone supposed to answer a question like that?

Reporters have a chance to do their job and ask President Obama and
his spokespeople a real question whose answer will have real meaning
to tens of millions voters: “Do you support the Bowles-Simpson cuts to
Social Security?”

No one should have to go the polls this fall not knowing whether or
not President Obama wants to cut Social Security. If reporters were
treated like school teachers, and tens of millions of voters go to the
polls not knowing the answer to this question, then they would all be
fired. But in a country where “double standard” is increasingly the
national motto, we shouldn’t expect incompetent reporters to be held
accountable for the quality of their work.

--This article was originally published on September 17, 2012 by Truthout.


-- 
Jim Devine / If you're going to support the lesser of two evils, at
the very least you should know the nature of that evil.
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