Social insecurity

Dionne, E. J. Jr.

E.J. DIONNE Jr. OF SEVERAL MINDS SOCIAL INSECURITY What happened to 'privatization'? Of candidates live up to what they are saying, the 2002 campaign has already resolved a central issue in our...

...Do they...
...To have a debate about this difference is not to engage in "scare" campaigns-unless, of course, advocates of privatization are scared by the political impact of their own positions...
...But what of someone retiring on, say, October 1, 2002...
...Why...
...If current benefits are to stay where they are, as the privatizers promise, the transition costs of privatization would run to about $1 trillion...
...Market advocates (Moore and Rhodes are among the more candid) dislike it when government plays a large role in people's lives, as it now does because of Social Security and Medicare...
...They can't...
...Exactly-if the Social Security flip-floppers stick by their latest positions...
...Where will that cash come from now that we are running deficits instead of large surpluses...
...Of candidates live up to what they are saying, the 2002 campaign has already resolved a central issue in our politics: Social Security privatization is dead...
...Which makes you wonder: Even if Democrats lose this election because of Iraq, will Republicans-no matter how hard they try to kill the Social Security issue-choose to interpret the Democrats' defeat as reason to revisit Social Security privatization...
...But Americans have always favored a mixed economy...
...We now have a number of candidates in close races who are forced to explain why they were once for private investment account options and now they are against it," they wrote Davis...
...They welcome the benefits of the market but want government to temper its inevitable failures and inequities through social insurance...
...They are willing to make their case without evasion and to say the same thing both before Election Day and after...
...Day and after...
...Voters fear that this minimum could be eroded by the inevitable gyrations of the stock market...
...Let's tip our hats to Moore and Rhodes, who would prefer that privatization be debated honestly...
...Social Security defines a fundamental philosophical difference...
...Personally, I prefer Moore and Rhodes...
...Social Security privatization is losing ground because most voters want some guarantee that if their investments go bust, or if they earn too little to save enough for retirement, the government will provide them a decent minimum through Social Security...
...Someone who retired on, say, January 1,2000, might have lucked out...
...Senate in South Dakota, Moore and Rhodes continued: "We are concerned that if Republicans denounce this crucial economic reform (as some candidates like John Thune are doing), even if we win in November, the victory will be to what end...
...The stock market slide has underscored the risks of privatization...
...Steve Schmidt, a spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee, recently acknowledged to the Washington Post's Jonathan Weisman that his party's current flight from privatization was dictated by electoral politics...
...That's because letting those currently working to invest a couple of percentage points from their Social Security taxes would drain that money from the system...
...In order for there to be an honest debate on Social Security, Democrats have to lose this election," Schmidt said...
...And how can privatizers keep their main promise: that their new system would leave individuals better off than they are now...
...who is overseeing his party's House campaigns...
...Their memo was in response to advice Republican candidates were getting from their Washington wordsmiths on the need to avoid being seen as in any way advocating the "privatization" of Social Security...
...It appears they are...
...As Robert Ball, a former Social Security commissioner, has pointed out, the poorest two-fifths of people over sixty-five get 82 percent of their income from Social Security...
...That is a losing proposition...
...Referring to the Republican candidate for U.S...
...Only after they've lost another election where they've put all their chips on the Social Security issue will honest-minded Democrats step forward to work on the issue...
...Stephen Moore and Thomas L. Rhodes, officials of the right-of-center Club for Growth, wrote in the memo that Republicans "risked being perceived as unprincipled flip-floppers on the Social Security issue...
...a privatization advocate-was prescient during his 2000 presidential campaign when he said the country couldn't afford both partial Social Security privatization and a large tax cut...
...If you doubt that the privatizers are losing, consider an impassioned memo sent in September to Congressman Tom Davis (R-Va...
...Moreover, it turns out that Senator John McCain (R-Ariz...
...The picture would be far less pretty...
...And we are talking about a lot of voters...
...We will set back the move to modernize Social Security by five years or more...
...At least, it ought to be if candidates mean what they are telling the voters...
...The word is now verboten...
...the middle fifth gets 64 percent...

Vol. 129 • October 2002 • No. 18


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.