Friday, July 19, 2019
The Privatization of Social Security Essay -- Social Security Privacy
The Privatization of Social Security       Many people donââ¬â¢t understand how the Social Security system really  works. There are no separate Social Security "accounts" set up for each  taxpayer to which he contributes his Social Security "tax" each year. Many  people believe these accounts exist, that the money they pay into their  accounts grows each year until retirement, and when they retire they get  back what they paid in with interest. This is not true. Most people are  unaware of the fact that our current Social Security system is a  "pay-as-you-go" program, which means that  the revenue the federal  government raises each tax year for Social Security benefits is paid out  that same year to beneficiaries.       Many economists believe that our Social Security system is in need of a  major overhaul if today's workers are to receive future benefits.       Thomas R. Saving, Director of the Private Enterprise Research Center at  Texas A&M  University says, "What is wrong is that the Social Security  system was never set up to be a sound investment-based retirement system."       Karl Borden, professor of financial economics at the University  of  Nebraska recently wrote, "Social Security is an unfunded pay-as-you-go  system, fundamentally flawed and analogous in design to illegal pyramid  schemes. Government accounting creates the illusion of a trust fund, but,  in fact, excess receipts are spent immediately."       Robert M. Ball, former commissioner of Social Security said, "Some of  the trust fund money should be put into the stock market. I want to do it  to get a better return for the Social Security system. Historically,  long-term government bonds have had a real return, after inflation, of 2.3  percent a year, compared with 6.3 percent for stocks."       Paul W. Boltz, economist for the T. Rowe Price mutual fund said, "When  we examine the pending financial crisis of our Social Security system, we  find, in effect, the characteristics of a government sponsored Ponzi-type  scheme."       Michael H. Cosgrove, of the Dallas-based newsletter, The Econoclast  says, "People need to take the responsibility of investing their own funds  for their retirement. The Social Security system assumes people can't make  that decision and government can do it better. The result is a bankrupt  Social Security System."       These economists believe that by investing ...              ...oss would have to be made up either by hiking taxes, increasing  borrowing or drastically cutting benefits to current retirees.  The  present Social Security system faces a long-term shortfall of between 1  percent and 4 percent of total payroll, depending on your projections of  future economic growth. But the existing pay-as-you-go system could be  rendered solvent by a judicious combination of increasing the retirement  age by two or three years and slightly  raising taxes.       Also there is the question of whether to privatize the whole system, or  whether to add a second tier. We might keep the basic system but  supplement it with self-directed IRA-like funds. The basic tier would be   redistributive and pay-as-you-go. The supplementary layer would be private   and based on individual contributions.       A further question is who bears the risk when investments go sour.  There is no such risk under the current system. The stock market looks  like a great retirement vehicle in the 1990ââ¬â¢s, but it wasn't so reliable  in the 1970s and 1930s. The program was deliberately designed as a social  guarantee of retirement income, not a system of government-mandated  private savings.                        
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