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Pandora would love this idea...

December 1, 1998

There has been a growing consensus that private investment is the key to any future Social Security reform. According to a new study, "The Perils of Government Investing" by Michael Tanner, director of the Cato Project on Social Security Privatization, "The key questions at the center of the upcoming debate on Social Security's future will be what kind of private investment? And who should do the investing?"

"These are critical questions because the implications of government control of investment are potentially fraught with peril. Imagine a government bureaucrat sitting on every corporate board. It is obvious that allowing the federal government to purchase stocks would give it the ability to obtain a significant, if not a controlling share of virtually every major company in America. Experience has shown that even a 2 or 3 percent block of shares can given an activist shareholder substantial influence over the policies of publicly traded companies.

"There is a nearly infinite list of current political controversies which would be ripe for restrictions if the federal government began investing Social Security funds. Both liberals and conservatives would have their own investment agendas." For example, should Social Security invest in:

"Tobacco companies? Companies that make nuclear weapons? Companies that do business in Burma or Cuba? Companies that extend benefits to the partners of gay employees? Companies that pollute? Or companies that donate to Planned Parenthood?"

The bottom line, warns Tanner, is that government investment of the Social Security trust fund would result in a dangerous mix of government involvement in corporate governance and social investing.

"It's your money, your choice, your future."

The Perils of Government Investing, by Michael Tanner, Cato Briefing Paper No. 43 (December 1, 1998)

Social Security Privatization and the Professional Skeptics

The recent report from EBRI on shifting from the current Social Security system to one embracing individual accounts purports to ask how these accounts would work. But the study offers a laundry list of administrative obstacles. In today's commentary, Robert Genetski argues that private retirement accounts may cost slightly more to administer, but would provide more substantial and secure retirement income than the current system.


Today's first (and best!) event at the National Press Club

This morning, the co-chair of the Cato Project on Social Security Privatization, William Shipman, will be the "Morning Newsmaker" at the National Press Club. He'll be speaking at 10:00 a.m. in the Lisagor Room.

Bill Shipman is a principal at State Street Global Advisors in Boston, and is the author of several papers on key aspects of privatization, most recently on the subject of transition costs. Today, he'll discuss in detail the three fundamental goals of any Social Security reform: ensuring financial security for today's elderly; ensuring that younger workers get to keep more of the fruits of their labor; and ensuring that any reform is a benefit to the economy, not a burden.

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"The Cato Institute, a Washington think tank, has spent about $3 million in the past six years to run a virtual war room to promote Social Security privatization."

- Glenn Kessler
The Washington Post
July 9, 2001