Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan strayed away from his charter
once again to warn about the people's entitlement programs - Social
Security and Medicare - becoming unaffordable. He suggested cuts in
benefits to reduce deficits.
In the same breath, Mr. Greenspan urged that Mr. Bush's tax cuts for the
wealthy - a huge cause of the growing federal deficits - be made permanent.
His priorities should come as no surprise, for Mr. Greenspan is the
ultimate oligarch.
The hundreds of billions of dollars in corporate welfare giveaways
annually, from local to state to federal governments, are not his
concern. He is comfortable with this kind of direct and indirect
corporate socialism where profits are less taxed and costs are
socialized on the backs of individual taxpayers.
Instead, what bothers Mr. Greenspan are the social insurance programs
for tens of millions of Americans-most of them the coming elderly. He
raises the spectre of social security insolvency because fewer workers
will be supporting retirees. He testified that "it is important that we
tell people who are about to retire what it is they will have." If so, why didn't the Chairman recall the projections by the Social
Security trustees who tell us that the retirement fund is solid until
2042 without any changes or benefit cuts, based on an average GDP growth
rate of 1.7 percent annually? The latter figure is very conservative.
For the past 50 years the average GDP growth rate has been well over
three percent.
At 1.7 percent, after 2042 without any changes, the decline in benefits
would be gradual. At over three percent growth rates, benefits would
continue beyond that date. Curious, isn't it, that the Chairman would
ignore the corporate lobbying causes of the federal deficits, such as corporate tax shelters, loopholes, subsidies, handouts, giveaways and so
forth. Why, if corporations and the wealthy were taxed at the rates
prevailing in the prosperous 1960s, the deficits would be no more, quite
soon.
Medicare is another matter. Its precarious future state is hostage to
staggering annual price increases by the health care and drug industries
which could be addressed by an efficient single payer health insurance
system.
Mr. Greenspan chose not to mention the budget busting corporate bonanzas
embedded in the $540 billion ten-year prescription drug deal. The
massive drug industry lobbying battalions raised their champagne glasses
when they got a ban on Uncle Sam negotiating drug price discounts for
medicines paid for by the government. There was no mention of that
lurking Niagara of red ink, corporate profiteering by the Chairman. Mr. Greenspan needs to be more introspective about why he focuses on
benefits for the people that stimulate economic demand and ignores
budgets and handouts for the corporations. It is not enough for him to
pronounce the tautology that the latter stimulate economic growth. For
whom? The increasing number of unemployed uninsured and undefended
workers, whose
white collar and blue collar jobs are being exported to very low wage
authoritarian countries?
The Chairman has serious trouble criticizing the corporate state,
including doing anything about the consumer credit abuses that the
Federal Reserve directly is supposed to stop, like predatory lending. Reaction by the Democrats - John Kerry and John Edwards - was one of proper
outrage to Mr. Greenspan's remarks. In their mind they may have been
regretting why President Bill Clinton re-nominated the Republican
Greenspan to another four-year term in 2000.
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