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Americans need Social Security more than ever, and they're willing to pay for it. Rather than more cuts, we need higher benefits across the board.
Americans need Social Security more than ever, and they're willing to pay for it. Rather than more cuts, we need higher benefits across the board.

This was the gist of my presentation at the National Academy of Social Insurance conference last month, whose theme was "Social Security and Medicare in a Time of Budget Austerity" (emphasis added). I wasn't expecting it to go over very well.
Though my colleague Josh Bivens likes to point out that deficit reduction doesn't necessarily imply spending cuts, and though Republicans don't hesitate to call for tax cuts in the same context, there's a general sense that expanding social insurance programs is out of the question and the best we can hope for is targeted measures to protect the most vulnerable.[1]
Even many progressives have trimmed their sails. Though most reject the need for additional cuts, few call for fully reversing cuts enacted in 1983, notably the gradual increase in the retirement age that is still taking effect. Progressives have also been divided about raising the payroll tax rate, the only way to pay for significant benefit increases while preserving the program's contributory structure. Though almost all agree we should "scrap the cap" on taxable earnings, this only gets you part of the way to closing the projected shortfall in the aftermath of the Great Recession.
This seems to be changing, if the mood at the NASI conference is any indication. Rather than being contrarian, my presentation was almost redundant. At the conference, NASI released the results of a poll showing strong support for Social Security by the American people, a consensus that benefits are inadequate, and a willingness to pay higher taxes to strengthen the program (I discussed these results in an earlier blog post). The poll made it harder to dismiss calls for expanding Social Security, though Wall Street Journal economics editor David Wessel tried. Among the other conference participants who made a strong case for expanding Social Security were blogger-economist Duncan Black (a.k.a. Atrios) and Wilhelmina Leigh, a participant in the 2011 Commission to Modernize Social Security, which led the way in calling for higher contributions and benefits across the board.
Admittedly, NASI poll respondents were lukewarm about specific across-the-board benefit increases, though they strongly supported packages that closed the shortfall and included these measures. People might be more supportive if such measures were presented as a way to reverse earlier cuts, since these cuts are news to many people.
What about concerns that the payroll tax is regressive and contractionary? The tax would be less regressive if we got rid of the cap on taxable earnings.[2] And a gradual increase in the tax rate could be postponed in a weak economy. The version I proposed, which roughly offsets projected growth in life expectancy, calls for a more gradual increase than that proposed by the Commission to Modernize Social Security, which focused on people of color, and a similar initiative last year focusing on women, which was also the version included in the NASI poll. (Both initiatives called for a combination of across-the-board and targeted increases.)
At the Center for American Progress last week, Senator Tom Harkin renewed his push for expanding Social Security as part of a comprehensive reform of our retirement system, saying this would be his top priority before he retires in 2014. It looks like the movement to expand Social Security is picking up steam.
[1] Social Security has dedicated financing and is required by law to operate in long-term balance. But the program gets dragged into deficit discussions because changes will be required to eliminate a projected shortfall and there are competing priorities for any revenues that can be generated by raising taxes. However, Strengthen Social Security coalition co-chair Nancy Altman likes to remind us that the program's popularity expands the political room for tax increases of any kind.
[2] High-income taxpayers would still have more unearned income, which makes payroll taxes regressive even if all earnings are taxed. However, the system as a whole is progressive when benefits are taken into account.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Americans need Social Security more than ever, and they're willing to pay for it. Rather than more cuts, we need higher benefits across the board.

This was the gist of my presentation at the National Academy of Social Insurance conference last month, whose theme was "Social Security and Medicare in a Time of Budget Austerity" (emphasis added). I wasn't expecting it to go over very well.
Though my colleague Josh Bivens likes to point out that deficit reduction doesn't necessarily imply spending cuts, and though Republicans don't hesitate to call for tax cuts in the same context, there's a general sense that expanding social insurance programs is out of the question and the best we can hope for is targeted measures to protect the most vulnerable.[1]
Even many progressives have trimmed their sails. Though most reject the need for additional cuts, few call for fully reversing cuts enacted in 1983, notably the gradual increase in the retirement age that is still taking effect. Progressives have also been divided about raising the payroll tax rate, the only way to pay for significant benefit increases while preserving the program's contributory structure. Though almost all agree we should "scrap the cap" on taxable earnings, this only gets you part of the way to closing the projected shortfall in the aftermath of the Great Recession.
This seems to be changing, if the mood at the NASI conference is any indication. Rather than being contrarian, my presentation was almost redundant. At the conference, NASI released the results of a poll showing strong support for Social Security by the American people, a consensus that benefits are inadequate, and a willingness to pay higher taxes to strengthen the program (I discussed these results in an earlier blog post). The poll made it harder to dismiss calls for expanding Social Security, though Wall Street Journal economics editor David Wessel tried. Among the other conference participants who made a strong case for expanding Social Security were blogger-economist Duncan Black (a.k.a. Atrios) and Wilhelmina Leigh, a participant in the 2011 Commission to Modernize Social Security, which led the way in calling for higher contributions and benefits across the board.
Admittedly, NASI poll respondents were lukewarm about specific across-the-board benefit increases, though they strongly supported packages that closed the shortfall and included these measures. People might be more supportive if such measures were presented as a way to reverse earlier cuts, since these cuts are news to many people.
What about concerns that the payroll tax is regressive and contractionary? The tax would be less regressive if we got rid of the cap on taxable earnings.[2] And a gradual increase in the tax rate could be postponed in a weak economy. The version I proposed, which roughly offsets projected growth in life expectancy, calls for a more gradual increase than that proposed by the Commission to Modernize Social Security, which focused on people of color, and a similar initiative last year focusing on women, which was also the version included in the NASI poll. (Both initiatives called for a combination of across-the-board and targeted increases.)
At the Center for American Progress last week, Senator Tom Harkin renewed his push for expanding Social Security as part of a comprehensive reform of our retirement system, saying this would be his top priority before he retires in 2014. It looks like the movement to expand Social Security is picking up steam.
[1] Social Security has dedicated financing and is required by law to operate in long-term balance. But the program gets dragged into deficit discussions because changes will be required to eliminate a projected shortfall and there are competing priorities for any revenues that can be generated by raising taxes. However, Strengthen Social Security coalition co-chair Nancy Altman likes to remind us that the program's popularity expands the political room for tax increases of any kind.
[2] High-income taxpayers would still have more unearned income, which makes payroll taxes regressive even if all earnings are taxed. However, the system as a whole is progressive when benefits are taken into account.
Americans need Social Security more than ever, and they're willing to pay for it. Rather than more cuts, we need higher benefits across the board.

This was the gist of my presentation at the National Academy of Social Insurance conference last month, whose theme was "Social Security and Medicare in a Time of Budget Austerity" (emphasis added). I wasn't expecting it to go over very well.
Though my colleague Josh Bivens likes to point out that deficit reduction doesn't necessarily imply spending cuts, and though Republicans don't hesitate to call for tax cuts in the same context, there's a general sense that expanding social insurance programs is out of the question and the best we can hope for is targeted measures to protect the most vulnerable.[1]
Even many progressives have trimmed their sails. Though most reject the need for additional cuts, few call for fully reversing cuts enacted in 1983, notably the gradual increase in the retirement age that is still taking effect. Progressives have also been divided about raising the payroll tax rate, the only way to pay for significant benefit increases while preserving the program's contributory structure. Though almost all agree we should "scrap the cap" on taxable earnings, this only gets you part of the way to closing the projected shortfall in the aftermath of the Great Recession.
This seems to be changing, if the mood at the NASI conference is any indication. Rather than being contrarian, my presentation was almost redundant. At the conference, NASI released the results of a poll showing strong support for Social Security by the American people, a consensus that benefits are inadequate, and a willingness to pay higher taxes to strengthen the program (I discussed these results in an earlier blog post). The poll made it harder to dismiss calls for expanding Social Security, though Wall Street Journal economics editor David Wessel tried. Among the other conference participants who made a strong case for expanding Social Security were blogger-economist Duncan Black (a.k.a. Atrios) and Wilhelmina Leigh, a participant in the 2011 Commission to Modernize Social Security, which led the way in calling for higher contributions and benefits across the board.
Admittedly, NASI poll respondents were lukewarm about specific across-the-board benefit increases, though they strongly supported packages that closed the shortfall and included these measures. People might be more supportive if such measures were presented as a way to reverse earlier cuts, since these cuts are news to many people.
What about concerns that the payroll tax is regressive and contractionary? The tax would be less regressive if we got rid of the cap on taxable earnings.[2] And a gradual increase in the tax rate could be postponed in a weak economy. The version I proposed, which roughly offsets projected growth in life expectancy, calls for a more gradual increase than that proposed by the Commission to Modernize Social Security, which focused on people of color, and a similar initiative last year focusing on women, which was also the version included in the NASI poll. (Both initiatives called for a combination of across-the-board and targeted increases.)
At the Center for American Progress last week, Senator Tom Harkin renewed his push for expanding Social Security as part of a comprehensive reform of our retirement system, saying this would be his top priority before he retires in 2014. It looks like the movement to expand Social Security is picking up steam.
[1] Social Security has dedicated financing and is required by law to operate in long-term balance. But the program gets dragged into deficit discussions because changes will be required to eliminate a projected shortfall and there are competing priorities for any revenues that can be generated by raising taxes. However, Strengthen Social Security coalition co-chair Nancy Altman likes to remind us that the program's popularity expands the political room for tax increases of any kind.
[2] High-income taxpayers would still have more unearned income, which makes payroll taxes regressive even if all earnings are taxed. However, the system as a whole is progressive when benefits are taken into account.