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Wall Street Worriers
October 19, 1999
Recent jitters on Wall Street caused some commentators to question the future
of Social Security privatization, which would allow workers to invest their
payroll taxes in stocks and bonds. Last week the Dow Jones Industrial Average
briefly dropped below the 10,000 mark, prompting ABC News' Cokie Roberts to
declare, "That's the end of Social Security privatization."
But the benefits of Social Security privatization don't come only through
bull markets or even average historical rates of return. Remember, many people
won't even get back what they paid into Social Security, much less make any
interest. And over periods of twenty years or more the stock market has never
lost money, even during the Great Depression. In short, it doesn't take a bull
market to beat a money-losing government program.
Forty-five years ago, when today's retirees entered the workforce, the Dow
Jones index stood at around 149. Today, it stands at over 10,000. For investors
in the stock market to do as poorly as future Social Security recipients are
likely to do, the stock market would have fall a lot farther than it has.
2001 Index | 2000
Index | 1999 Index | 1998
Index
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