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Fri Jul 25 2008
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Columns
Molly Ivins
A no-brainer
February 8, 2005
AUSTIN, Texas -- Last week, The New York Times quoted a Harvard Law student who favors the privatization of Social Security as saying the accounts-formerly-known-as-private are "a no-brainer."
Funny, I'd say that pretty well describes this future legal eagle.
Here's my take: If you aren't smart enough to figure out what's wrong with President Bush's plan to privatize Social Security, then you won't be able to run one of the accounts-formerly-known-as-private, either. (The White House doesn't want anyone to call them private accounts anymore, even though they have always been known as private accounts -- it's the new political correctness.) It's not as though this were all just-too-complex for the average citizen.
Without any math at all, you can understand the most important problems with the Bush plan:
A) It doesn't fix Social Security. This is not a partisan contention -- the Bush people admit it, though they use bizarrely fuzzy language. Before the president's State of the Union Address, a "senior administration adviser" (means head honcho in charge) told the Los Angeles Times that "the individual accounts would do nothing to solve the system's long-term financial problems." It does nothing to shore up Social Security, no fix, no nada.
B) They're using two starkly different economic projections to make their case. In the first, under a gloom-and-doom scenario no one thinks is realistic, Social Security will NOT be broke, bust, flat or bankrupt in 2042. Even under the grimmest forecast, the system will still be able to pay retirees more in constant dollars than it does today -- the shortfall would be a fraction of 1 percent of the national income. Despite Bush's funereal announcement, "The crisis is now," it is not now and it is not a crisis.
To fix that is easy -- raise the cap on Social Security taxes (the point at which they no longer apply and you don't have to pay any more) from $90,000 a year to $200,000 a year. According to The New York Times, that step alone would just about cover the entire invented, fabricated meaningless scare figure -- "$11 trillion Social Security deficit" -- constantly reiterated by the Republicans marching in lockstep. That particular bit of horsepoop comes from predicting Social Security into infinity, a meaningless exercise.
C) If you use the same unlikely doom-and-gloom scenario Bush uses to predict the "bankruptcy" of Social Security to predict the future of his formerly-private-accounts plan, the accounts will be an abysmal failure because the economy will be so bad, they won't make any money. But lo, as Bush presents it, the economic future is not going to be grim at all, but au contraire, so rosy everyone will have more money and there is such a thing as a free lunch.
Of course, if the economy actually is that rosy, then Social Security would never run into trouble in the first place, all will be magically solved by glorious economic growth, and we don't have to do a thing.
D) The plan will cost around $2 trillion in "transition costs" just to shift from the current system. You notice Bush didn't mention that in the State of the Union. That's $2 trillion we don't have, can't afford and will have to borrow, with horrid economic consequences, all quite apart from the fact that the plan won't work.
E) Similar plans have so far been tried in Chile, Argentina, Bolivia, Britain, Singapore and Sweden. According to The Wall Street Journal, there are problems with it everywhere. Only in Chile, the Journal says, "the program is considered a solid success, though hardly the 'miracle' it is sometimes portrayed in seminars and studies by proponents overseas."
In addition to large fees charged by fund managers -- the Journal says 20 percent, others say one-third of the total deposited -- there is widespread evasion of the system. According to the World Bank, half the contributions of the average Chilean worker went to management fees. The Journal also cites several reasons why the United States, with more mature markets, is unlikely to ever see the dizzying heights of the plan's early years in Chile.
F) Of course, Bush's plan cuts Social Security benefits, both now and in the future. Here's how: He wants to change the benefits from being indexed to wages to being indexed to inflation. The result will be to cut future benefits by 40 percent or more.
G) If our future legal eagle is alert, he will have the administration explain "clawback" to him. In his big speech last week, Bush said of private accounts, "And best of all, the money in the account is yours, and the government can never take it away."
Bull. Here's how the future cuts work: You invest your money in an account that over time nets you a nice little profit. The government then "repays" itself the money it "loaned" you at 3 percent interest by cutting your Social Security benefits by that amount. If you managed to make 4 percent on your account in which you contributed $1,000 a year from the start of your career, you would have $99,800 by the time you retire, but the government would keep $78,700 of it, about 80 percent. If you only made 3.3 percent, you're left with nothing but the guaranteed benefit, now diminished by inflation indexing.
To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2005 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Molly Ivins
"A moral issue" December 29, 2005
"This could scarcely be clearer" December 28, 2005
"Fantasy in Iraq" December 21, 2005
"Good old constitutional crisis" December 19, 2005
"Another mission accomplished" December 15, 2005
"Pre-procrastination Christmas booklist!" December 13, 2005
"Annual Christmas book list" December 6, 2005
"Talking for God, taking for personal gain" December 1, 2005
"Let's make lemonade this Thanksgiving" November 24, 2005
"Which Bush crony will be the next Brownie?" November 17, 2005
"Are they stupid, or are they lying?" November 14, 2005
"What have we become?" November 10, 2005
"The Brownie memos" November 8, 2005
"Worst legacy of the Bush years" November 3, 2005
"Leaping lightly" November 1, 2005
"Diane Wilson, magnificent unreasonableness" October 25, 2005
"How do we fix this mess?" October 20, 2005
"Good ideas on how to fix things" October 18, 2005
"Pensions" October 14, 2005
"Outrage of the Week" October 12, 2005
"The big picture" October 6, 2005
"Bunker Time: Harriet Miers" October 6, 2005
"Ronnie Earle, partisan fanatic?" September 30, 2005
"The KatrinaRita" September 27, 2005
"A giant snit" September 22, 2005
"Project Censored 2006" September 20, 2005
"The Bankruptcy Act and New Orleans" September 17, 2005
"Dear Dubya, Your Pal, Perry" September 15, 2005
"Where to look first" September 8, 2005
"Happy Labor Day, comrades" September 4, 2005
"Real consequences" September 1, 2005
"Solidarity Forev ... ooops, make that, Solidarity Later" September 1, 2005
"Blink" August 30, 2005
"The trouble with deregulation" August 27, 2005
"John Roberts and the Federalist Society*" July 27, 2005
"The AFL-CIO, CWC, SEIU, and tough SOBs" July 26, 2005
"We're missing the point" July 19, 2005
"Karl Rove, the CIA, and the media" July 14, 2005
"Eaten alive by corruption" July 7, 2005
""Progress" through economic interest" July 1, 2005
"The liberal straw man" June 28, 2005
"Follow the money" June 23, 2005
"PBS, CPB, and Republican bias" June 19, 2005
"Bush's high office appointments" June 15, 2005
"The Hyper Rich" June 8, 2005
"Indians pay conservative lobbyists to meet with Bush" June 7, 2005
"More fun from Texas" June 2, 2005
"Catapulting the propaganda" May 30, 2005
"The irony surplus" May 26, 2005
"National Laboratory for Bad Government" May 25, 2005
"The Koran and Guantanamo" May 18, 2005
"This is a revoltin" May 18, 2005
"Meanwhile, back in Iraq" May 10, 2005
"The current state of American energy policy" May 5, 2005
"Progressive indexing? Oh, you mean cutting Social Security benefits?" May 4, 2005
"Populist lagniappe" April 28, 2005
"The nuclear option and judicial activists" April 26, 2005
"John Bolton vote delay" April 21, 2005
"I like conservatives" April 19, 2005
"The real consequences of Tax Day" April 13, 2005
"Technical violations: oh, they're all related" April 12, 2005
"Non-parent in residence" April 5, 2005
"Hypocrisy, the U.S. and the U.N." April 1, 2005
"Truly crazy: the Cheney energy policy" March 29, 2005
"The Schiavo mistake" March 21, 2005
"This guy smells like a slop jar" March 16, 2005
"Government produced "news"" March 15, 2005
"Arrogant, humorless, self-righteous and confrontational" March 10, 2005
"Go, Byrd" March 7, 2005
"Bankruptcy Bill: A gift to big bankers and credit card companies" March 3, 2005
"They're at it again" March 1, 2005
"Yeah, it's really terrible what the president of Harvard said" February 24, 2005
"Fiscal nonsense" February 22, 2005
"Tort reform: not as simple as they'd like you to think" February 16, 2005
"The President's budget" February 16, 2005
"More bad news from Bush" February 10, 2005
"A no-brainer" February 8, 2005
"Divide between Bush's rhetoric and reality" February 3, 2005
"International election black clouds" February 1, 2005
"More complicated than George W. Bush thinks it is" January 28, 2005
""Private accounts" versus "personal accounts"" January 27, 2005
"What, do you want to insult Condoleezza Rice's integrity?" January 24, 2005
"Alternate reality" January 21, 2005
"Character" January 18, 2005
"A flat out whopper" January 13, 2005
"These people are slicker than bus station chili" January 11, 2005
"Prior-roarities" January 9, 2005
"Off to a bad start" January 3, 2005
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