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Updated: 7:18 p.m. Friday, June 25, 2010 | Posted: 7:16 p.m. Friday, June 25, 2010
By Jonathan Battaglia, Robert Weiner
The Social Security Trustees' Annual
Report on the program's finances comes out Wednesday, delayed from March
by the health bill. It will be turned into a marketing tool by advocates
of cutting Social Security to reduce the national debt.
Among those, the president's newly
appointed National Commission on Fiscal Reform (the "debt commission")
is threatening to strangle the economic lifeblood of seniors by denying
the solvency of Social Security and then using the solvent funds for other
purposes.
It's an illusion that cutting Social
Security would reduce the deficit. If the new report does not point out
that the money seniors have given to Social Security keeps it solvent through
2043, and after that 80 percent funded, it's a propaganda fraud for defunders.
Moreover, that future shortfall is
only a blip - a point missed by nearly all media. After the Baby Boomers
reap their Social Security benefits, since those Boomers have had the fewest
children ever (2.1 per couple vs. the current 2.7 rate), the system will
return to full solvency because it will pay benefits to fewer people.
To cut a national deficit by cutting
Social Security, which does not have a deficit, is theft from seniors
who have paid in. If a bank told a customer, "Sorry. We've spent your
money on other items," would anyone accept that or say: "Fine, you made
money on my money but you still owe me mine. Pay up."
The debt commission is littered with
politicians and industry CEOs who have a history of wanting to scale back
Social Security benefits. House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers,
D-Mich., told us in an interview, "The commission is loaded with billionaires
who want to convert Social Security's money to business."
Commission Co-chairman Erskine Bowles
is linked to Wall Street as a Morgan Stanley board member, and Honeywell
CEO David Cote to the defense industry, both of which would benefit from
Social Security's money. Will these captains of industry stand up for
people who need Social Security the most? Or look for ways to transfer
its money to defense and stocks?
Co-chairman Alan Simpson, along with
Dave Camp, Judd Gregg, Tom Coburn and Mike Crapo, made statements supporting
cutting or privatizing Social Security. Sen. Richard Durbin told "bleeding-heart
liberals" to be open to Social Security cuts. Alice Rivlin co-authored a
2005 report titled Restoring Fiscal Sanity that advocated $47 billion in
entitlement cuts, including an "increase in the retirement age under Social
Security."
Why could the administration not appoint
former Connecticut Congresswoman Barbara Kennelly, president of the National
Committee to Preserve Social Security? Or Al Gore, who famously said he
would protect Social Security in a "lockbox"? Or expert "policy wonk" Bill
Arnone, a partner at Ernst & Young, co-author of the firm's retirement
planning guide, a spokesman for the positive economics of Social Security?
The program remains indispensable in
enabling the 38 million senior citizens over 65 nationwide and 3 million
in Florida to live their lives in dignity. Without Social Security, nearly
half of Americans age 65 or older would be below the poverty line. For
two-thirds of the elderly, Social Security provides the majority of their
income. For one-third, it provides nearly all.
We need the courage of the late Florida
Congressman Claude Pepper. In 1978, when Commerce Secretary Juanita Kreps
suggesting raising the retirement age, Rep. Pepper and House Social Security
Chairman James Burke ran over for a meeting, and Rep. Pepper said they would
"fight it to our death." Ms. Kreps suddenly said the proposal hadn't been
drawn up.
The debt commission has plenty of options.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the military needed to cut its "gusher
of defense spending." Congress could also scale back the Bush tax cuts
for the wealthy to the levels they were under President Clinton and could
get rid of tax breaks for U.S. corporations doing business overseas. The
deficit needs to be cut, but not at the cost of our seniors.
During a 2006 speaking tour, every
time President Bush spoke of his plan to privatize Social Security, his
approval ratings dropped. His advocacy of cuts helped cost Republicans
the Congress. While up a hair recently, the market has lost 20 percent since
2000. Voters knew that would have meant 20 percent less food on the table
for seniors or money for electricity. President Obama should not let the
commission make the same mistake, or this time it will cost him and his
party.
Robert Weiner was chief of staff of the House Select Committee on Aging, chaired by the late U.S. Rep. Claude Pepper, and a senior public-affairs director in the White House. Jonathan Battaglia is policy analyst at Robert Weiner Associates.