Silicon said:
Yeah, I seem to remember a presidential candidate promising something like that in the last election... what was his name? Kerr....something. Anyway...
Don't remember his bringing it up - probably got lost in the noise about his Vietnam service. Anyway, it's still a good model.
Especially if you're reducing the amount that people are paying INTO SS. That's the problem with the Bush plan. Sure, you get better money back for YOUR MONEY, but those gains are offset by a smaller SS check
Right - but the idea is that you'll more than make up the difference by investing the money elsewhere. It's not particularly hard.
Look at a couple of stock funds I picked out here. Look at the "since inception" performance. I didn't pick them out at random; they're funds I own myself:
T. Rowe Price New Horizons (click on the "Performance" tab).
This is Putnam's Voyager class A fund (too many click to get to the page, so I'm putting it here for you):
Inception Date: April 1, 1969
1-year average performance (as of 12/31/2004) 4.79%
3-year average performance -1.35%
5-year average performance -9.13%
10-year average performance 9.10%
(Performance since inception not available online)
I'm no stock-picking wizard, by any means; back in the 1990's, it seemed like you could get rich by selling anything I bought (I rarely buy stock any more, except through my automated mutual fund purchases and thrift plan allotments). These are a couple of funds I bought after a little research on the part of the Price one, and on the advice of a friend on the second. And when you think of all the hundreds (thousands?) of mutual fund companies out there, finding funds that have 40-year records of 10% average annual returns is no great trick.
Those people retiring in 1932, assuming they had been investing their money in the Dow since 1912, saw all of their earnings evaporate.
Okay - looks like you're right on that one, though you had to cherry-pick pretty hard to find it; it looks like that's just about the
only twenty-year history for which you could say that - if you'd started at 1911 or 1914, for example, instead of 1912, my claim would still hold true. Note also that if you take the graph out just another five years, to 1937, the Dow had recovered about 2/3 of what it had lost after the 1929 crash.
And you know that if you put the rest of the chart in your post - the post-1945 period, your readers would have to scroll off the screen to see how well the Dow's done since 1945
And that's exactly the problem. People can't always choose when to retire. Your back goes out, and your working days may be over. And those poor slobs retiring during a downturn just lost a big chunk of their safety net.
That's true - it
is an issue - what happens to the guy who gets crippled in an auto wreck at age 24? . Maybe Social Security should be changed to strictly a disability program? Just thinking out loud here.
But don't kid yourself that SS will take care of you just because, as you put it, "your back goes out." SS pays disability benefits only for severe, permanent disabilities. If you're 24 and your back goes out, you will almost certainly
not qualify for Social Security disability, because SS defines a disability as an illness, injury, or medical condition so severe that it will keep you from doing
any substantial gainful activity (SGA) for at least a year or cause death within a year. The definition of SGA was insanely strict when I left SSA in 1988 - if you could do work that paid you $300 a month (not a typo - that's three hundred, not thousand), then you were not disabled. Your 24-year-old construction worker making $40,00 a year would almost never be considered disabled due to a bad back, because he was young enough to be retrained for lighter work. If he was 55 years old, with a 6th-grade education, he'd have a better chance, but even then, it was at best, 50/50.
The current Social Security system bets on the same prospect. If payrolls go up, payroll taxes do too, Social Security remains solvent.
You keep on believing that. As I said, I've got my civil service retirement, so it's not my problem if you're wrong.
Are they able to take earnings out of that for safety and diversification? Buying bonds, gold, real estate? Just a question.
Not really. There are five funds (started in 1984 with only three):
Government Securities Investment (G) Fund
Fixed Income Index Investment (F) Fund
Common Stock Index Investment (C) Fund
Small Capitalization Stock Index Investment (S) Fund
International Stock Index Investment (I) Fund
Employees can allocate their contributions as they wish, and redistribute as they wish (when getting close to retirement, you'd probably want to move money out of the C fund into the less-risky G fund; I haven't, myself, but I'm an idiot...)
You'll notice there's no "Enron Fund" or "Martha Stewart Fund" or "Russian Oil Companies Fund." The politicians screaming that "your grandma is going to starve when her Enron investment tanks!!!" are using scare tactics. These funds have dozens (hundreds?) of diversified investments, so even when one goes belly-up, it doesn't kill your whole investment.
To see how these funds have performed, click
here.
Browse around the federal thrift site while you're there, then ask yourself why everyone doesn't have something like this.
Social Security isn't just a retirement plan for old people. It's also a life insurance,
The "life insurance" payoff is only $255.00, and it only goes to your surviving spouse.
I've discussed some of the limitations of that above.
and a survivor support plan. So people will be putting money in and recieving benefits with a shorter turn around than 40 years.
Some - not most. There's no question some people get far more out of it than they put in. But the system doesn't guarantee anything like that. It can't guarantee anything like that, because it's physically impossible to do; if
you were to try to make such a claim, you'd end up in jail for running a Ponzi scheme.
People's stock valuation depends on the year that they claim it. Assuming that this system has already been in place, someone retiring in 2001 would be retiring with HALF the money that their brother retired with in 2000.
Don't know where you get those numbers. Yeah, my investments took a pounding in 2000/2001, but I didn't lose anything remotely resembling half my savings.
That's politically untenable. People would storm the gates.
Would they? If they recognize that markets have short-term ups and downs, but that long-term, it's up, as long as America remains a productive, prosperous country (and if it doesn't, there will be because there are a lot more, severe problems going on than just a SS funding crisis), the trend will remain up.
You might argue that he's doing great, or somehow better than before. If that's the case, WHY have ANY social security, why not invest it all?
There are those who argue that that should be more than just a rhetorical question.
If everyone could count 100% on their children to take care of them when they grew old (think of the Amish), we wouldn't need Social Security. Unfortunately, not everyone has children, and some people have children that should be taken out and shot (Mrs. BPSCG and I are in the former category, just for the record...).
If everyone was disciplined enough to save ten percent of their salaries every single paycheck for thirty or forty years, we wouldn't need Social Security. Unfortunately, there are way too many people who aren't even disciplined enough to brush their teeth every day, let alone save their money.
So Social Security, in some form or another, is going to have to be with us for a long time - until either everyone has children who will take care of them in old age, or everyone provides for their own old-age security.
Well, you can't make people have children. But privatization is the first step toward the second situation - people taking care of their own retirements. But that's a long way off, so until then, each generation is going to have to depend on the next generation to support it. The demographic problem, however, is that the "retired" generation is going to get bigger and bigger, relative to the "working" generation, and that means an increasing burden on the "working" one. I've explained this before - Social Security has had a thirty-year history of benefit cuts and tax increases, and the only alternative the opponents of privatization offer is - more of the same. How long do you think your so-called "guaranteed" benefit is going to last when your children, thirty years from now, decide enough is enough?
And if we DON'T guarantee a floor level of support, can we really call it Social Security?
I think I've answered that question above.
A question for those who say, "Just raise the tax a bit and cut the benefits a bit":
Sometime in the next fifty years, scientists are going to be able to significantly increase life expectancy. They're going to find ways to turn off whatever part of the DNA sequence that causes aging.
What happens to Social Security when grandma retires at age 67, and collects Social Security benefits until she dies tragically young in a whitewater kayaking accident at the age of 347?