
A LOOK AT . . . THE FUTURE OF SOCIAL SECURITY
All Americans Deserve A Private Program Like This
April 12, 1999
By Carrie Lips
Privately owned accounts produce retirement income that is far
superior to the Social Security system, and die-hard defenders of Social Security
know it. So they've taken to arguing that the personal retirement account alternative
is just "too dangerous to test in the real world."
But the fact is that, in the real world, some 5 million workers
employed by state and local governments are already outside the Social Security
system, and a very fortunate subset of this group has exactly the sort of private
account alternative that Congress should be aiming for.
The personal retirement account system for government employees
in Galveston, Tex., is the one that has drawn most of the media's attention.
News organizations such as ABC News and USA Today have told the impressive story
of 1,500 Galveston employees and the much greater retirement benefits they get
from a rather conservative, low-risk investment plan. But there is an even better
example of the benefits a system of personal retirement accounts can provide
in San Diego, where some 8,000 city employees receive even greater choice and
higher returns--and therefore greater retirement benefits--from their personal
accounts.
How did Galveston, San Diego and many other cities escape the
"black hole" of Social Security? When the system was created in 1935, coverage
was not offered to state and local government employees; at the time, Congress
was concerned about the constitutionality of the federal government taxing state
governments. In the 1950s, however, the law was changed to give state and local
governments a chance to go into Social Security--or remain outside, if they
wished. Then in 1983, the law was changed again to prevent any more from leaving.
In 1981, just two years before that last change in the law, the
city of San Diego decided to opt out. The city's administrators believed that
they could provide a better deal for their workers with an independent retirement
plan. The city created the Supplemental Pension Savings Plan (SPSP), a mandatory
defined-contribution plan. While this program replaces Social Security, city
workers can, of course, participate in other retirement vehicles, just like
employees in the private sector. For example, while city workers are automatically
covered by San Diego's defined-benefit pension plan, they have the option of
investing in a 401(k) plan as well as a separate deferred compensation plan.
In the SPSP program, participants like Bob Tilaro, a 43-year-old
senior utility supervisor, are required to contribute 3 percent of their salaries.
They can go beyond the minimum requirement and put as much as 7.5 percent of
their salaries into their accounts. The city matches employees' contributions
dollar for dollar, which provides an additional incentive to save.
When Tilaro began working for the city of San Diego in 1986,
he was skeptical about the plan and contributed only the minimum. After a year
of watching the growth of his account, fueled by the returns on his investments,
he decided to contribute the maximum. His decision to go beyond the minimum
is not unusual; more than 85 percent of the plan's participants take advantage
of the additional savings option.
When the program began, all assets in San Diego employees' accounts
were invested by the city treasurer in lower-risk securities, which averaged
between 5 percent and 8 percent return a year. In 1996, San Diego restructured
the program, giving its employees greater control over their accounts and greater
freedom to invest. Instead of being restricted to investments in low-risk securities,
they may now choose from among four mutual funds as well. San Diego workers
have shifted close to 50 percent of the program's assets into mutual funds;
since 1996, a booming economy has helped these funds post an average annual
rate of return of more than 14 percent.
When Tilaro stops working at age 65, he will use the assets in
his account to provide income for his retirement. Assuming his annual salary
remains at about $44,000 per year and his investments earn a 7 percent real
rate of return, his account will be worth approximately $630,000 in 1999 dollars
by the time he retires. According to estimates provided by the benefits administrator,
an asset of this value could purchase an annuity with a monthly payment of approximately
$4,200 today.
If Tilaro instead had to participate in Social Security, he would
be eligible to receive a monthly payment of about $1,300 starting at retirement
age. Of course, by that time baby boomers will be moving out of the work force,
and Social Security is likely to be in serious financial trouble. Unlike San
Diego's program, Social Security uses "pay-as-you-go" financing, which means
payroll taxes are immediately spent as benefit payments. No real assets are
reserved for future benefits. As the ratio of workers to retirees dwindles,
payroll taxes will become insufficient to pay all currently legislated benefits.
By 2034, according to the Social Security Administration, taxes will have to
rise from the current 12.4 percent to almost 18 percent of payroll, or benefits
will have to be cut by at least 25 percent.
State and local retirement plans fund future benefit payments,
a fundamentally different approach than the pay-as-you-go Social Security system.
The additional revenue generated by investing at least a portion of workers'
contributions allows state and local retirement plans to offer higher benefits
and more flexibility than Social Security.
State and local retirement plans vary when it comes to who controls
the programs' assets and who makes investment decisions. There are two main
types of state and local retirement programs: defined-contribution plans, like
the city of San Diego's, in which individuals own and invest their contributions;
and defined-benefit plans, in which funds are pooled and invested by pension
fund managers and benefits are determined by a set formula.
While state and local defined-benefit plans are a big improvement
over Social Security since their funds are invested in real assets that appreciate
in value, they also exhibit an important flaw. The Institute of Fiduciary Education
estimates that 42 percent of such pension systems are required to allocate a
portion of investment funds to projects that are supposed to support a local
economy. Other pension systems prohibit investing in tobacco companies, or in
firms that produce music or art deemed objectionable, making investment decisions
political rather than economic. Not surprisingly, their returns tend to be more
modest than those of systems where individuals own the accounts and invest in
ways that are designed to maximize their retirement income.
Tilaro, who is married and has three children, sees the ownership
of his account as a benefit in its own right: "Ours is a real retirement program,
where you watch your account grow and know it's going to be there. I hear talk
about Social Security--about whether or not there is going to be enough money
in the future--and am glad I'm not a part of it. There is no guarantee with
Social Security like there is when you actually own your money."
Those with a vested interest in maintaining Social Security's
status quo malign proposals for personal retirement accounts as impossibly complicated
and risky. But the real-life, ongoing program in San Diego proves just the opposite:
A universal system of personal retirement accounts is not only feasible, but
provides participants with real security grounded in personal ownership of investment
accounts.
Carrie Lips is a policy analyst at the Cato Institute and the
author of State and Local Government Retirement
Programs: Lessons in Alternatives to Social Security.
This article originally appeared in the Washington Post,
April 11, 1999.
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