About the Project | Contact Us | Search

cato.org
Its Your Money, Your Choice, Your Future
Cato Institute
Project on Social Security Choice Project on Social Security Choice

Reform and YOU
Social Security Toolkit

Cato's Plan
Get Involved
Press Room
Congressional Corner


Join Us in our efforts —
we need your support.

Donate Today!
 

A Lesson From Mexico

October 6, 1999

Tuesday's USA Today reported on the disappearance of a Mexican government pension fund into which 2.6 million Mexicans working in the United States had contributed as much as $150 million. Under the bracero program, which ran from 1942 to 1964, the Farm Security Administration deducted 10 percent of the wages of Mexicans temporarily working in the United States. After transfer to the Mexican government these wages were to have been invested in a special pension fund. Today, the Mexican government can find no trace of it.

Luckily, Mexicans now have the option of starting their own personal pension accounts, where their retirement savings are safe from this type of government mismanagement. If Americans had personal accounts, they might not be once again looking at the government spending their payroll taxes on things that have nothing to do with Social Security.

Mexico has learned that the safest place for retirement savings is an account controlled by workers. It's about time the United States caught up.

2001 Index | 2000 Index | 1999 Index | 1998 Index





Printer Friendly Version


  Quick Facts Archive  
  48 million Americans receive Social Security benefits, including 33 million retirees, 7 million survivors, and 8 million disabled workers.
[Details...]
 
Research Corner
 

BROWSE BY TOPIC

Social Security's Financial Crisis
Rate of Return Issues
Women, Minorities, and the Poor
Other Reasons for Social Security Reform
Government Investment of Social Security
Social Security Reform Plans
International Pension Reform
Transition Financing
Problems and Criticisms
Public Opinion and Polling

BROWSE BY AUTHOR Go

BROWSE BY TYPE Go

 
 

"And there are more ideas-driven initiatives to come, including the partial privatization of Social Security, an issue that would still be unthinkable were it not for the relentless agitation of places like the Heritage Foundation and the Cato Institute."

- The Economist
February 10, 2001