
Cato's Tanner Tells Bush to "Go For the Big One"
December 20, 2000
In a new op-ed, Michael Tanner, director of Cato's Project
on Social Security Privatization, urges the new Bush administration to establish
immediate credibility by tackling the biggest public policy problem around,
Social Security: "During the presidential election campaign, one of George W.
Bush's most popular proposals was to allow workers to invest a portion of their
Social Security taxes in private capital markets. Now that he has won--albeit
by the most excruciatingly close margin--Washington pundits are advising him
to abandon this proposal, concentrating instead on small "confidence building"
proposals. But that is exactly the wrong advice. In fact, if president-elect
Bush wants to unite the American people behind his administration and secure
a place in history for something besides the 'Florida miracle,' he should make
Social Security reform the defining issue of his presidency."
"If next summer the American people are still talking about chads and butterfly
ballots, the Bush administration will be in trouble. A series of tiny inconsequential
initiatives, no matter how well intentioned, will do nothing to redefine a Bush
presidency. Instead, he must find a "big" issue to focus the public's attention
on, an issue that can both excite and unite the American people. And no issue
will do that better than Social Security.
"According to election night exit polls, 57 percent of American voters support
the privatization of Social Security. That makes Social Security privatization
arguably more popular than Bush himself. If he is going to pick an issue to
stake his political capital on, it seems logical to pick one that already has
the support of a majority of Americans.
"Social Security privatization is also an issue that offers a unique opportunity
for Bush to reach out to those who did not support him in the election. Bush
received the smallest percentage of the African-American vote of any Republican
candidate in recent history. But African-Americans, with shorter life-expectancies
and less accumulated wealth, are among the groups that stand to benefit most
from Social Security privatization. Polls consistently show that African-Americans
support private investment of their Social Security taxes. This is an opportunity
for President Bush to appeal to blacks on far more than a symbolic basis.
"Likewise, Republicans are still perceived as a party that favors the wealthy.
But the wealthy already have the advantage of being able to invest in private
markets and accumulate wealth. The poor have no discretionary income with which
to invest, especially after being forced to pay 12.4 percent of their income
in to a failing Social Security system that provides them with absurdly low
rates-of-return. Social Security privatization would allow low-wage workers
to save, invest and accumulate wealth. It would be hard to think of a better
example of compassionate conservatism in action, giving every truck driver and
waitress and lathe operator on the factory floor the same opportunity to fully
participate in the American economy as their wealthier counterparts do. Imagine
the transformation of American politics when there is no longer a divide between
labor and capital--because every laborer is a capitalist.
"Will Social Security privatization be easy to get through a closely divided
Congress. Of course not. But Social Security privatization does offer the opportunity
for the type of bipartisan cooperation that Bush has talked about so often.
A number of prominent Democrats such as Senator John Breaux of Louisiana and
Congressman Charles Stenholm of Texas support individual accounts.
"On the other hand, little initiatives will not necessarily be any easier
to pass. Some Democrats will be all too anxious to kill any Bush initiative
in order to make him look ineffective and to taint his presidency. With small
initiatives, there will be no political price to pay for such obstructionism.
That's not the case with Social Security privatization. If Democrats decide
to oppose an idea supported by 57 percent of American voters, Bush will have
a ready-made issue in the next election.
"Bush's victory could not have been narrower. But that doesn't mean he should
be a timid president. A bold move on Social Security reform wouldn't just be
the right thing to do for the country, it would be the right thing to do for
his presidency."
Click here to see other Cato op-eds
and articles on Social Security.
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