 |

Social Security Privatization and the Economy
October 5, 2001
With the American econ0my moving into a recession, it is worth remembering that
Social Security privatization could help stimulate economic growth. While certainly not
a short-term stimulus measure, allowing workers to invest their Social Security taxes is
likely to provide significant long-term economic benefits.
Social Security operates on a pay-as-you-go basis, with almost all of the incoming
funds paid out immediately to current beneficiaries. This system displaces private
alternatives under which the funds coming in would be saved and invested for the future
benefits of today's workers. The result is a large net loss of national savings, which
reduces capital investment, wages, national income, and economic growth. Moreover, by
increasing the cost of hiring workers, the payroll tax substantially reduces wages,
employment, and economic growth as well.
A shift to a private system, with hundreds of billions of dollars being invested in
individual retirement accounts each year, would likely produce a large net increase in
national savings, depending on how the government financed the transition. This would
increase national investment, productivity, wages, jobs, and economic growth. Replacing
the payroll tax with private retirement contributions would also improve economic
growth, because the required contributions would be lower and those contributions would be seen as part of a worker's direct compensation, stimulating more employment and
output.
Harvard economist Martin Feldstein estimates that privatization of Social Security
would produce $10 trillion to $20 trillion in present value net benefits to
America. (See, Martin Feldstein, "Privatizing
Social Security: The $10 Trillion Opportunity," Cato Institute Social Security
Paper no. 7, January 31, 1997). That is essentially his estimate of the present
value of the improved economic performance that would result from the reform.
Most of that net benefit would probably come in the form of the higher returns
and benefits earned for retirees through private investment accounts. But some
would come in the form of higher wages and employment for working people.
2002 Index | 2001 Index | 2000 Index | 1999 Index | 1998 Index
|

|