I'm still waiting for BPSCG's response to really my key question about remaking social security.
***KEY QUESTION: If investment in the stock market is the solution for Social Security, and nobody can do less than the minimum they'd get under a do-nothing plan, why not guarantee a floor-level benefit? And if we do NOT guarantee a floor-level benefit, can we really call it Social Security? *********
In the meanwhile, here's a couple of points.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...cagotrib/gopsenatorssaygoslowonsocialsecurity
And this, from TalkingPointsMemo, a blog focused currently on the battle over SS.
http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/
I think that's what's really gumming up our discussion here. We have a president who won't put forth his plan, but he keeps saying PARTS of it.
No numbers at all, and the only parts he DOES talk about are things like privitization which doesn't even address the issue of solvency.
He keeps running around saying "solvency is the problem," and then proposes a solution that even fans of privitization say don't address solvency.
***KEY QUESTION: If investment in the stock market is the solution for Social Security, and nobody can do less than the minimum they'd get under a do-nothing plan, why not guarantee a floor-level benefit? And if we do NOT guarantee a floor-level benefit, can we really call it Social Security? *********
In the meanwhile, here's a couple of points.
GOP senators say go slow on Social Security
...
"It's going to require just a tremendous education effort," said Sen. George Voinovich (news, bio, voting record) (R-Ohio), part of a group of senators meeting to discuss possible approaches to shoring up the long-term fiscal health of the retirement program. "I don't think a lot of senators really understand the program yet."
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...cagotrib/gopsenatorssaygoslowonsocialsecurity
And this, from TalkingPointsMemo, a blog focused currently on the battle over SS.
There is great public interest and notice. Many people are worried, in most cases with good reason. And yet the president says again and again that he won't say just what he wants to do to Social Security.
When a reporter asked him about this at the conversation in the White House yesterday, he said this ...
"The tendency in Washington is, ‘OK, Mr. President, you play your cards now and we’ll decide if we’re going to play ours. I’m not going to do that. I’m keeping them close to the vest."
Shouldn't there be some pressure on this guy to just come clean? To say what he wants to do?
Sure, yes, there's legislative politicking and making the first move and all that. But this goes a bit beyond that. The president is pushing this. This is all about him. Absent initiative from him, replacing Social Security with private accounts wouldn't even be on the agenda. Though the policy has some ardent Republican supporters, the impetus all comes from him.
When you brush away all the legislative gobbledygook and beltway jockeying, you have a president who wants to put what is probably the most popular government program in American history under the knife and he won't even say what he wants to do to it.
Shouldn't his critics just be saying over and over: level with the public? Tell them what you want to do to Social Security.
http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/
I think that's what's really gumming up our discussion here. We have a president who won't put forth his plan, but he keeps saying PARTS of it.
No numbers at all, and the only parts he DOES talk about are things like privitization which doesn't even address the issue of solvency.
He keeps running around saying "solvency is the problem," and then proposes a solution that even fans of privitization say don't address solvency.