sarge
Penultimate Amazing
Well, given that you are now comparing social security to private investment as though they are competing services, er, no.
I did no such thing. You are making crap up again.
Let's not get confused about who pays the social security tax, now. The entirety of the tax is borne by the employee:
The employer pays half the tax. Do you honestly believe that if Social Security were to simply disapear tonight that the employers would all increase the income of the employees by 7%?
Of course not - and that means that while paying the cost of the employers portion of social security is a cost of labor, it is not part of an employees salary.
What do you mean its unlikely that the wage would increase 7%? The wage doesn't have to increase at all, it just has to not be automatically reduced by taking from it. And the number is 14%.
No, the number is 7% - the employers would not increase the employees salary by the employers portion of Social Security taxes.
So that's her own negligence. It is not the result of an inability to pay, it is merely the result of not wanting to pay. The many shouldn't be punished to rectify and enforce the mistakes of the few. That makes no sense whatsoever.
It is some part poor choice and some part inability - but you are confused about where the majority of Americans rest. The majority of Americans would not contribute 15% more of their wages to their retirement accounts if Social Security were to disappear - especially as their take home pay would only be about 5% greater than it is now.
And, of course, as you have already learned, the amount freed up to be invested privately would indeed be 14% through higher wages.
No, it would not. It would be about 5% - as the money not paid to Social Security taxes would itself be subject to taxes. An employee not paying his share of Social Security taxes would take home about 5% more than he does now, and would forfeit 9% of "his" salary that is currently going to Social Security. His employer would keep almost 7%, and his income tax would take the rest.
It is merely a trick of accounting to think that the employer bears the cost of the additional tax - one side is taken transparently and is written on the employees paycheck, and the employers side is in his books in the form of lower wages for the employee.
Nope. It is smoke and mirrors on the part of social security opponents to claim that an employer, suddenly free of the burden of shipping 6.2% of his labor expenses off to the goverment, would simply give it to his employees.
This point boils down to why we believe that people's investments were made insolvent. You think its because of animal spirits,
I have expressed no opinion on the source of losses individual investors suffered in their retirement accounts. You could not possibly know my opinion on the subject. You are making crap up again.
I think its because of government policy that creates malinvestment and moral hazards. As such, I believe the solution is to remove the policy that creates this drama and allow investments to be sound, rather than supplement the problem with the inefficient band-aid of social security.
Do you often divert discussions in this way?