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CONTACT: Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) Alan Barber, (571) 306-2526 |
False Sense of Urgency Over Changes to Social Security
Even without changes, program will remain solvent for years.
WASHINGTON - November 8 - Many policymakers and analysts are insisting that there is an urgent need to make major changes to Social Security. Their argument that long-term imbalances make the case for action now have even swayed some who consider themselves supporters of the program. A new issue brief from the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) calls attention to the fact that Social Security will be fully solvent for the next 27 years and any premature action to make changes to the program will have a severe impact on millions of near retirees.
"Misinformation about Social Security has led many to believe that Social Security is in immediate danger of insolvency" said Dean Baker, a co-director of CEPR and author of the report, "but the program will be fully solvent for almost three more decades. Furthermore, even if no changes are ever made, a child born in 2010 can expect to see a benefit that is more than 50 percent larger in real terms than what current retirees receive today."
The issue brief, "Action on Social Security: The Urgent Need for Delay," argues that the decline of traditional media and the rise of new media is likely to lead to a public that is better informed about the state of Social Security's finances. In addition, the growth in the portion of the population dependent on Social Security is likely to make benefit cuts more politically difficult in the future.
The brief also notes that the cohorts of near retirees who will be protected from benefit cuts by delaying action have already been victims of wage stagnation in their working lifetime. They have then seen much of their wealth destroyed with the collapse of the housing bubble and the resulting stock market plunge. Protecting this generation from further harm is an important goal of delay.
As demonstrated in the report, there is a great amount of public confusion over the current and future state of Social Security. More accurate analyses of the program are making their way into the public discourse and at present there is no need to rush forward with changes and cuts to Social Security.

1 Comment so far
Show AllThat's a nice answer from =economic researchers=.
But it ignores the verity that =social security= derives from Social Contract, and from the distribution of power within the society.
Bill Moyers has detailed the case in his recent essay that the echelon plutocrats are frankly and openly determined to eliminate as many of the American lower classes as possible by political homicide, and -with unrelenting psychopathy- by suicide.
The wars in the Middle East are Red Herrings to divert attention from the more critical Class Warfare on this soil. The tea party middle class are now Jews wearing Nazi armbands and black shirts, while goose stepping through the halls of Congress. They will multitask, i.e. with their pants down for entry of the rich, they will use their hands to throttle the poor. That this is immoral and pornographic will never even occur to them. They have a ready label for any criticism targeted at them - as did the German gas chamber operators.
The hypothetical Social Security economic status is supercilious when enough power exists for the plutocracy in this nation to pass a Federal Act: ==Blow Me Right Now, Else I Pull the Trigger Act==.
Where there is no vision the people by cheap knee pads. Truth will set you free to buy the top quality ones at Wal-Mart, ones which feel comfortable for a 12 hour patriotic shift.
"The power of accurate observation is often called cynicism by those who have not got it." -- George Bernard Shaw.
Trylon