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Young People Offer Support for Social Security Reform:

December 20, 2001

If Social Security reform is to become a reality it will require strong support from today’s younger workers. According to an op-ed in USA Today, by Richard Thau, executive director of Third Millenium, a youth advocacy group, and economic consultant Jeremy Hildreth, the youth of America are ready to take on that challenge.

Hundreds of our Generation X peers died Sept. 11, and thousands more are risking their lives in the war on terrorism. But once America's agenda returns to domestic issues, President Bush should ask Gen Xers to make another disproportionate, if far less severe, sacrifice: Assume the generational burdens necessary to reform Social Security before the baby boomers retire. Doing so would be politically shrewd -- and painless.

To people in their 20s and 30s, Social Security has always seemed like a hopelessly bad deal that swallows one-eighth of our earnings while promising little, if any, long-term payoff. Our skepticism is rooted in experience. In 1982-83, while we were mere adolescents and teens, the Greenspan Commission had to save Social Security from immediate collapse. This rescue substantially increased FICA taxes just before Gen Xers entered the workforce, then pushed back our benefits eligibility age from 65 to 67.

Ever since, the program's anticipated insolvency date never seems to budge from the general period when we Xers expect to retire. Now, the forthcoming final report from the latest commission undoubtedly will reconfirm our worst suspicions: Our generation will foot boomers' massive bills.

We've had scant input into proposals to fix the system. Only 2 of the 61 seats on the three most recent major Social Security commissions were filled by a GenXer. No worries for Granny

Put simply, except for a handful of young activists, Generation X has gone AWOL on Social Security. Most Xers fail to participate at the ballot box or at town hall meetings, preferring to let older age groups set the agenda for us. Perhaps we should be embarrassed about not defending our generational self-interest as fiercely as the AARP crowd. Regardless, Bush and Congress should be emboldened by our abdication. For them, putting the onus on Xers is all gain and no pain. Neither Grandma nor her political support is in jeopardy, for we whippersnappers will pay up with nary a whimper.

But before politicians embrace the no-risk strategy of balancing Social Security's budget on our backs, we beg one favor: Give us the option to invest some of our FICA money in the financial markets. Restructure the system so that our generation and the ones that follow have the chance to create real wealth while Social Security redistributes most of our payroll tax up the generational chain.

Time on their side

Our relative youthfulness gives us plenty of time to take advantage of the surprisingly stable -- and agreeably high -- long-term rates of return that diversified equity investment has historically offered. Data from Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel, long-term investment's guru, show that since 1801, owning stocks for a 35-year period gave an average after-inflation annual return of 6.8%. Even the worst 35- year spell returned an average 3.4% per year. This is two to four times what many Xers can expect to see from Social Security.

So, here are the terms of our conditional surrender: As long as we Gen Xers can build wealth in personal Social Security accounts, we won't hassle our elected leaders or complain about having to clean up whatever financial debris the rest of the program generates. And if the boomers help us now, we'll try to remember their kindness when they are old and dependent, and we Xers hold Social Security's purse strings.

No matter how much goodwill we Generation Xers engender for our recent heroics, boomers inevitably will dump a toxic Social Security system in our backyards. Evidently, that's OK with us. But, man, those individual accounts sure would sweeten the smell.

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  A medium income worker born after 1965 can expect a rate-of-return of less than 2% on his or her Social Security taxes.
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"The largely Cato Institute-staffed presidential commission owes its existence to the Cato Institute itself. For the last quarter of a century, the Washington, D.C.-based libertarian think tank has been campaigning for the privatization of Social Security."

- William O'Rourke
Chicago Sun Times
August 28, 2001