
Voters Deserve The Truth On Social Security
November 6, 2000
by Andrew G. Biggs
In a presidential race this close, a little bit of exaggeration is to be
expected. But the latest Social Security attack ads from Vice President Gore
and the Democratic Party cross the line from “fuzzy math” to outright falsehoods.
A current Democratic National Committee television ad says George W. Bush
is “promising to take a trillion dollars out of Social Security so younger
workers can invest in private accounts. The problem is, Bush has promised
the same money to pay seniors their current benefits.” Recorded phone calls
by actor Ed Asner claim that personal accounts would mean benefit cuts for
today’s seniors. And Gore himself talks up the “missing trillion” he claims
personal accounts would cost over ten years, saying it is “a fair question
to ask where that $1 trillion is going to come from.”
Wrong on all counts. Multitrillion-dollar Social Security surpluses mean
we can build personal accounts for the future without cutting today’s benefits
by a penny. The Gore campaign surely knows this, but the temptation to demagoguery
must be too great.
George W. Bush promises to let younger workers invest part of their Social
Security payroll taxes -- about 2 percentage points out of the 12.4 percent
total -- in accounts similar to IRAs or 401(k)s. The accounts would be optional,
but since opinion polls show more than two-thirds of younger Americans wanting
personal accounts, let’s assume that every worker under the age of 50 took
part. In that case, these accounts would invest somewhere around $850 billion
in stock mutual funds and corporate bonds over the next 10 years. (It’s only
if all workers at all ages participate that we get near the $1 trillion figure
the Democratic ads cite.)
It’s this money the DNC ads claim is promised to existing retirees. If that
money goes to personal accounts, the ads say, today’s Social Security benefits
must be cut. But this claim is false. The reason is that Social Security is
slated to run large surpluses -- some $928 billion in cash and another $1.2
trillion in interest on the trust fund from 2000-2009. So even if every eligible
worker opted for Bush’s personal accounts, Social Security could pay every
penny of benefits to current retirees and still run a 10-year surplus of over
$1 trillion.
But what about the long run? Even if personal accounts are affordable today,
don’t they drain money from the trust fund that will eventually be needed
to pay benefits? Vice President Gore makes this charge, but nothing could
be further from the truth. For one thing, deposits to personal accounts don’t
take money out of the system, since the accounts could only be used to pay
Social Security benefits. And personal account investments would earn a far
higher rate of return than the “special” non-negotiable government bonds in
the trust fund. Government bonds have averaged just 0.5 percent interest after
inflation throughout the post-war period. Compare this to the 7 percent average
return from stocks and the advantages of market investment are obvious.
But this rate of return difference isn’t even the most important thing. Because
in a very real way, money placed in the trust fund isn’t really saved at all.
In the current system, payroll tax surpluses are simply spent and the trust
fund is given an IOU to be repaid by raising taxes on future taxpayers. The
Clinton administration itself admits that trust fund bonds are not “real economic
assets that can be drawn down in the future to fund benefits. Instead, they
are claims on the Treasury that ... will have to be financed by raising taxes,
borrowing from the public, or reducing benefits or other expenditures.” By
investing in real economic assets like stocks and corporate bonds, personal
accounts would save today’s surpluses to pay future benefits -- without raising
taxes.
Contrary to what Vice President Gore says, personal accounts will save today’s
surpluses for Social Security without cutting benefits for current retirees.
The Democrats’ latest senior-scaring scheme is little more than an attempt
to derail a popular reform proposal in the closing moments of a presidential
campaign. That’s understandable, given that the vice president’s political
career is at stake. But that doesn’t make it right.
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