
Publications of Interest
October 23, 2000
The Congressional Budget Office released "The
Long Term Budget Outlook," which focuses on the fiscal pressures created
by the aging of American society. In 1970, total spending on Social Security,
Medicaid and Medicare equaled four percent of gross domestic product. Today,
total spending has increased to seven percent of GDP, and unless spending is
restrained could increase to 16 percent of GDP.
The National Bureau of Economic Research
released "Retirement Responses
to Early Social Security Benefit Reductions ," by Olivia S. Mitchell and
John W.R. Phillips. Mitchell and Phelps examine how individuals would react
to reductions in the Social Security benefits paid to those who take early retirement,
concluding that reductions would increase the likelihood an individual would
stay in the workforce until normal retirement age.
The Heritage Foundation released "How
Railroad Retirement Investment Scheme Threatens Social Security Reform ,"
and Executive Memorandum by David
C. John. John argues that the legislation is bad in itself, in that it lowers
taxes and cuts the retirement age at a very time the fund faces large future
deficits.
More importantly, the legislation's provisions for government investment in
the stock market and its budgetary scoring threaten to make government investment
of the Social Security trust fund wrongly appear to be easier to finance than
personal retirement accounts. The General Accounting Office released "Social
Security Reform: Implications for Private Pensions," which discusses the
effect of reform proposals on the private pension system.
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