
Privatization and a Down Market
September 25, 2001
As the stock market tumbles in the wake of the tragic events of September
11, some opponents of Social security privatization have again raised the
specter of market risk. However, even in this uncertain investment
climate, several things should be remembered:
The market will eventually come back. U.S. financial markets have
weathered catastrophic events before. Social Security privatization is not
about short-term market fluctuations, but long-term investment.
Historically, long-term investment has yielded average annual returns of
nearly 8 percent. There is no reason to believe that that will not
continue in the future.
The economic fallout from September 11 hurts the current Social Security
system too. Rising unemployment and declining tax revenue will worsen
Social Security's financial problems.
Social Security privatization does not mean investing only in stocks.
Under most privatization scenarios, workers would be able to invest in a
wide variety of instruments, including bonds, annuities, money market
funds, and various products that provide a guaranteed return.
In the end, Social Security privatization is about ownership and control of
one's retirement money. Those advantages are not dependent on how the
market performs.
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