
Transition Costs - Public Favors Spending Cuts Over Tax Increases
October 22, 1999
A prominent issue in the Social Security privatization debate is over "transition
costs." Opponents of privatization like the Century Foundation say that "unless
our parents move in with us, we will have to pay twice--for their retirement
as well as our own." As Nobel Prize winning economist Milton Friedman details
in Cato Briefing Paper No. 46, Speaking
the Truth about Social Security Reform, over the long term, transition costs
are a myth.
Yet, in the short term there would be up-front costs involved with moving
to a privatized system. While these early costs would be more than repaid over
time, how do we cover them? We could raise taxes, issue debt or cut spending.
The Cato Institute recently commissioned a Zogby
International poll asking Americans what they would prefer. The answer was
practically unanimous: cut spending.
By a margin of 10-to-1, Americans prefer to cover transition costs by cutting
spending rather than raising taxes. By 27-to-1, they favor spending cuts over
borrowing. These findings were similar for men and women; blacks, whites and
Hispanics; and Democrats, Republicans and Independents.
Over the long-term, there are no transition costs in moving from a low-returning
pension system like Social Security to a high-returning system with personal
accounts invested in stocks and bonds. The sooner we move to a system of personal
accounts and the more completely we do so, the lower our long-term costs.
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