Column: Push to expand
Social Security gains momentum
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[June 09, 2016]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A coalition of
progressive politicians, policy experts and grassroots advocates
started a campaign three years ago facing very long odds. They
proposed expanding Social Security retirement benefits for millions
of Americans.
Mainstream thinking in Washington at the time ran in the opposite
direction: Social Security benefits should be cut as part of a
“grand bargain” to get the federal deficit under control. Nearly all
Republicans supported this consensus view, as did many Democrats
with moderate or conservative leanings. President Barack Obama also
bought in to this thinking, signaling that he was open to benefit
cuts as part of a big budget deal.
Meanwhile, it has become more evident that retirement security is
eroding for many Americans. The value of Social Security benefits
has shrunk by roughly 25 percent due to benefit cuts put in place
when the program was last reformed in 1983. At the same time, the
share of households receiving guaranteed income from traditional
pensions has plunged.
And a very large segment of the near-retirement community has
negligible savings: Among workers age 55 or older, just 30 percent
have saved more than $250,000, according to the Employee Benefit
Research Institute; 15 percent have between $100,000 and $249,000 -
and 33 percent have saved less than $25,000.
But the tide has turned - big time - and it is starting to look like
Social Security expansion really could happen.
DRAMATIC SHIFT
Obama endorsed the idea in a speech last week - a big development
signifying that the idea has been pushed to the center of the
Democratic political agenda. Much of the credit for this belongs to
Senator Bernie Sanders, an early sponsor of expansion legislation.
Other key advocates include senators Elizabeth Warren, Sherrod Brown
and the recently retired Tom Harkin.
Neither of the presumptive nominees for president favor cutting
benefits - although with Donald Trump, it is difficult to tell.
Hillary Clinton has slowly moved from “no cuts” to embracing
expansion.
If Democrats win the White House on Nov. 8 and regain control of
either legislative chamber as part of a Trump-linked Republican
meltdown, they will be in position to propose expansion as part of a
much-needed, broader Social Security reform package. That is a
dramatic shift from the Social Security battles of the past decade,
when progressives were forced to play defense against proposals to
reduce annual cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs), increase
retirement ages - and transform the program into a system of private
savings accounts.
What would expansion look like? Many advocates want to see an
across-the-board boost, with progressivity built in to avoid large
increases to the wealthiest households.
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Sanders’ bill would boost benefits across the board by roughly $65
per month, and adopt a more generous annual COLA that accounts for
the higher healthcare costs faced by seniors. It also would provide
a minimum benefit aimed at reducing senior poverty rates. Clinton
proposes expanded benefits targeting widows, which is one way to
address the greater longevity risk facing women. She also favors
awarding Social Security work credits for women who take time from
formal jobs to care for children, aging parents or sick family
members.
A WINNING IDEA
Congress will have to address Social Security sometime soon. The
program's two key trust funds - for retirement and disability
programs - are on track to be exhausted in 2034, absent an injection
of new revenue, benefit cuts or some combination of the two. Without
reforms, the program would have only enough continuing tax revenue
to pay 79 percent of promised benefits.
The smart approach is to address the shortfall and expansion
simultaneously. And paying for all this is not difficult. For
example, the Sanders bill extends the trust funds’ solvency for 50
years by eliminating the cap on payroll taxes for high-income
workers. Currently, no income over $118,500 is taxed. Sanders would
leave that cap where it is but subject income above $250,000 to the
tax.
Other reasonable revenue ideas that have been floated include a very
gradual increase in payroll tax rates over time, expansion of estate
taxes and investing a small portion of the trust fund in stocks to
boost returns (currently, reserves can be invested only in
low-return Treasury notes)
The key question right now: how big an issue will Democrats make of
Social Security in the fall election? Expansion is a winning issue
with voters - strong majorities of Americans favor the idea, and
most would be willing to pay higher taxes to finance it, according
to polling by the National Academy of Social Insurance. That is true
of both Democratic and Republican voters.
The Democrats should build a strong Social Security expansion plank
into their platform and then campaign hard on it through autumn.
Then they will be in a position to propose legislation through an
open process - not the back-door “grand bargain” talks that
politicians have used in the past to cover their tracks on cutbacks.
That could force expansion opponents to explain to their older
voters why they oppose putting $70 extra in the pockets of
grandmothers every month - or why they are OK with allowing Social
Security to keep veering toward a 21 percent benefit cut in 2034.
Any bets on how that fight turns out?
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist
for Reuters.)
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