
One Cheer for Uncle Sam's New Social Security Statements
October 28, 1999
by Deroy Murdock
MSNBC columnist Deroy Murdock is a co-founder of Third Millennium and a
member of the Cato Institute's Advisory Board on Social Security Privatization
NEW YORK - New and improved Social Security Statements are coming soon to
a mailbox near you. On October 1, the Social Security Administration (SSA) began
sending Americans yearly forecasts of their expected federal retirement benefits.
Look for your SSS about three months before your next birthday. The SSA deserves
some credit for the SSS. Giving Americans a glimpse of what Uncle Sam's largest
program offers them sure beats the more difficult process of requesting this
information.
Still, the SSS will give some Americans the impression that the federal government
maintains specific, cash-filled accounts with their names on them, as if the
SSA were Citibank.
No such luck. Last year, out of $489.2 billion in total FICA tax and interest
revenues, $382.3 billion immediately went to retirees. $3.8 billion and $3.5
billion, respectively, financed railroad pensions and administrative costs.
The $99.6 billion balance flowed into the so-called Social Security Trust Fund.
Since 1965, Congress has swiped the Trust Fund for general spending. The Treasury
collaborates by substituting Special Issue Treasury Notes (Washingtonese for
IOUs) for the cash that Congress devotes to dairy subsidies, nuclear submarines,
gasoline for Albert Gore's limousine, etc. The leaders of the GOP Congress promised
to halt this fraud in an era of $115 billion budget surpluses. Now they are
fidgeting like smokers on a non-stop flight from Tokyo to Newark. By October
21, when a stop-gap spending measure expires, Americans will know whether Congress
has kicked the habit and produced a budget that doesn't embezzle the Trust Fund
once again.
The SSS barely acknowledges the political risks inherent to a pension system
entrusted to politicians. The program has changed in the past to meet the demands
of the times and must do so again, it blandly states. The sample SSS (available
on-line at http://www.ssa.gov/mystatement/)
introduces us to Wanda Worker. She resides at 456 Anywhere Avenue in Maintown,
USA. Her benefits estimate concretely illustrates Social Security's shortcomings.
Born in 1960, Wanda earns $30,364 annually. The SSS assumes she will receive
this wage until retirement.
This naturally ignores the fact that a law-abiding 39-year-old woman can anticipate
at least some increases in income before walking into her retirement party.
The glass ceiling, thankfully, is not made of titanium. Nevertheless, if Wanda
retires early at age 62, her SSS predicts she will earn $6,952 per year in Social
Security benefits. If she waits until she reaches the full retirement age of
67, she can look forward to $13,152. If she continues to toil away until age
70, her annual earnings will be $16,380.
Wanda might applaud such figures were she in a vacuum. Too bad the SSS doesn't
mention that when Wanda retires, Social Security will pay only 75 percent of
planned benefits. If Congress freed Wanda to invest her FICA taxes in her own
account, however, her pension checks would swell. The Cato Institute's Social
Security Calculator compares Social Security income with likely returns
from stocks and bonds.
This resource indicates that if Wanda placed her payroll taxes conservatively
in a portfolio solely containing bonds that pay 5 percent interest, she would
receive $13,258 by retiring at 62. She would earn $17,927 annually at 67 and
$21,446 if she quit work at 70. A portfolio evenly split between bonds and stocks
with real annual returns of 7.5 percent (the yearly average by which stocks
advanced between 1926 and 1996) would generate $22,072 per-year at age 62.
Retiring five years later would offer $30,714 annually and $37,479 at 70.
If Wanda lived on the edge, she could put all her eggs in equities. Again, with
7.5 percent real returns, her annual income at 62, 67 and 70 would be, respectively,
$36,388, $52,367 and $65,338. These figures far outrun Social Security, even
assuming (foolishly) that the growing population of retirees and shrinking pool
of workers will not require future benefit cuts.
Money aside, private retirement accounts would free Americans to choose when
to retire. A Chilean-style pension system would permit Wanda Worker to receive
benefits once she could purchase an annuity yielding 50 percent of her average
salary over her final 10 work-years. Rather than wait for Washington to tell
her when she could start her golden years, Wanda could pick a retirement date
and invest accordingly.
Comparing the SSS with the potential benefits of a privatized Social Security
system dramatizes how much today's system cheats Americans. It also vividly
illustrates the true costs of being governed by Republican and Democratic careerists
who fear that millions of Wanda Workers might achieve greater freedom and prosperity
thanks to capital markets, not Capitol Hill.
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