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InvisibleBlack -> RE: Social Security now in permanent deficits (1/26/2011 7:50:07 PM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: MrRodgers You are talking a speculative pension requirement vs a govt. guaranteed pension obligation. Technically, nothing other than its existence is "guaranteed". You are not guaranteed any amount, nor that you'll even make money, nor do you have any right to any stream of income. It's not really a "guaranteed pension". There are no contractual obligations. It's just an entitlement of unknown value. quote:
It is obvious by this post that until now or about this time SS paid for itself with payroll deductions. Actually, the SSTF projections in 1980 indicated the fund would run out of money in 1983. This is what spurred the sudden bipartisan effort to "bail out" social security. A combination of falling real wages, rising inflation and massive unemployment in the late 70s had pretty much blown Social Security out of the water. quote:
A govt. pension has no business either being specualtively invested or lent to the treasury as it has been. The corruption is in a congress that never saw a dime it didn't want to spend. I believe that technically it's not a "government pension" but "retirement insurance" - but that's a quibble. I agreee with you that the corruption is in Congress' inability to stop pilfering it. Where I think we disagree is that you believe some rule or law can be enacted to stop this whereas I feel that, in the long run, nothing will prevent the government from latching onto a huge pool of money in its hands except taking it out of its hands. quote:
The soc. sec accounting distinction I refer to is just that...on the govt. books. There is no separate fund...so no 'trust fund.' I agree. quote:
The soc. sec. reform did nothing for its current account as of 1983. Soc. sec. was at the time, solvent but heading into trouble. The only immediate effect of 'reform' at the time was a 30% increase not in federal tax but only in the payroll tax our most regressive of all withholding. That increase immediately sent an additional $50 billion to the feds. I disagree. Social Security was on the rocks, which is why after twenty or thirty years of stalling, both parties suddenly acted fast. The major change was allowing social security benefits to be taxed for the first time in history. This had the amazing effect of both reducing the payout and increasing revenues. Dark genius. This single change resulted in the huge surpluses Social Security showed for the next ten or twenty years. Unfotunately, those surpluses were squandered as well. I believe it was the 1983 amendments that also took the social security trust fund off-budget, so it showed as a revenue source but not as a debt obligation and exempted social security from any budget cuts. quote:
It's as if for the last 27 years, soc. sec had been invested in wall street and govt. took the profits...spent it and gave us new bond debt in its place. So, the next 'reform' could raise payroll taxes again and any over payment will be squandered...again !! I would argue it's more like for the last thirty years you've been contributing to an annuity only to find out when the due date rolls around that the banker has been using your money for his own personal projects, but that he promises you he'll have your money for you just as soon as he reorganizes his bank and hires a new accounting firm. I agree with you that the next reform will only make any 'benefit' you or I will ever receive from social security much lower than it already is.
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