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Social Security University Recap

September 3, 2002

Social Security University, a four-day lunch series held last week, allowed Cato scholars Michael Tanner and Andrew Biggs and pollster John Zogby to share their knowledge of Social Security with Hill staff and others. Covering everything from trust funds, to benefit formulas, to reform proposals, Social Security University gave participants a clearer understanding of the Social Security system and options for reform. Monday's session was broadcast live on C-SPAN. Details of the series follow:

Monday, August 26, 2002
Social Security 101: The Program and the Problem

Cato Institute Social Security experts Michael Tanner and Andrew Biggs will discuss how the current Social Security system works, how it is financed, and why reform is necessary. They will examine the current benefit structure, the nature of the Social Security Trust Fund, and the assumptions behind the trustees’ projections of coming insolvency.

Tuesday, August 27, 2002
Personal Accounts: Facts and Fantasy

Andrew Biggs will discuss how personal accounts fit into the debate about Social Security reform and will examine major individual account proposals, both in Congress and by the President’s Commission to Strengthen Social Security. Biggs will examine major critiques of personal accounts and sort out fact from fiction.

Wednesday, August 28, 2002
The Alternatives to Individual Accounts

Although proposals for individual accounts have been much debated, there has been far less discussion of the alternatives. Michael Tanner and Andrew Biggs will discuss other proposals for Social Security reform, including tax increases, benefit cuts, and government investing. They will look at proposals from prominent opponents of individual accounts from Congress, academia, and special interest groups.

Thursday, August 29, 2002
The Politics of Social Security Reform

Pollster John Zogby will review the latest public opinion findings and discuss how Social Security reform may impact the fall elections. Zogby, who has polled likely voters numerous times on this issue, will address polling results on voters’ opinions of individual accounts and look at how the politics of Social Security reform will affect both sides of the aisle.

2005 Index | 2004 Index
2003 Index | 2002 Index | 2001 Index
2000 Index | 1999 Index | 1998 Index





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"For the White House, Cato is an indispensable source of expertise-with two decades of pro-privatization research and lobbying under its belt, it knows more about the issue (of Social Security) than just about anyone else in Washington."

- Ryan Lizza
The New Republic
August 13, 2001