
Railroad Fund Legislation Bad Precedent for Social Security
July 25, 2000
Next week, the House Ways and Means Committee plans to mark up HR
4844, Railroad Retirement and Survivors' Improvement Act of 2000, sponsored
by Rep. Bud Shuster (R-PA) and having 211 cosponsors. Despite its popularity,
the legislation's advocacy of government-controlled investment in the stock
market would set a bad precedent for Social Security.
The Railroad Retirement System is a federally legislated program providing
retirement, disability and survivor annuities to workers employed in the railroad
industry. Workers covered under the RRS are exempt from Social Security, though
Social Security credits earned under non-railroad employment are honored by
the railroad system. Benefits are financed through a combination of employee,
employer, and Federal Government contributions The Railroad Retirement system
currently faces an unfunded liability of $39.7 billion, but HR 4844 would increase
many benefits while reducing contributions.
More importantly, the legislation would establish the Railroad Retirement Investment
Trust, which could invest up to $18 billion in taxpayer dollars in the Rail
Industry Pension Fund in the stock market. This fund is considered part of the
federal budget and is currently invested only in government securities, as is
the Social Security trust fund.
This raises the specter of a government-appointed board picking winners and
losers in the private sector, with billions of dollars in taxpayer money at
their disposal to do so. Experience with government-dictated investment both
at the state level and abroad is what caused Federal Reserve Board Chairman
Alan Greenspan to so strongly oppose the Clinton administration plan for government
investment. Likewise, Vice President Gore claims that Greenspan's arguments
swayed him against market investments of any kind for Social Security.
It is ironic that dozens of Congressman who strongly opposed government investment
of Social Security funds in the market are open to setting this precedent. For
more information on government investment in the stock market, see Michael Tanner's
"The Perils of Government Investing."
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