Wednesday, March 16, 2005

Social Security Reform and your Investments

Will it Wipe out the current “Trust Fund�?
Mr. Bush and the début of Social Security reform and, particularly, its privatization has not exactly heralded celebration in some sectors lately. Mr. Bush inherited a severely busted system that needs to be repaired. It’s time for clarity, not lugubrious scare tactics and naysayers.

First of all, the legendary Social Security Trust Fund is a fiction. There is no fund, because it doesn’t have a scintilla of funds in it. Ever since its inception, way back in the days of 1935, current tax dollars put into the system go right back out to the current Social Security recipients or as dollars for congress to spend. That’s where the story would end, but there’s more. The Trust Fund is supposedly backed by government securities. That doesn’t mean anything because the money does not have to be repaid. For example, if I hold a government bond, I have an asset that pays interest or has the liquidity to sell at any time. If the government holds a bond, however, it has no obligation to pay itself. It is meaningless.

Nothing has ever been saved in the Social Security Trust Fund or put into reserve. So there is no trust and no fund. The trust fund consists of IOU's from Congress, which keeps spending the money. Social Security taxes have been used, (read borrowed), to offset the federal budget deficit. A surplus in the Trust Fund means they took in more tax dollars that year than they had to pay out that year. In years when the Social Security trust fund was operating in surplus, as happened in 1995, the extra revenues were used to buy Treasury bonds that financed the general operating costs of government and to lower the deficit. They used the Trust Funds to pay the bills. This amounts to legal embezzlement. Representatives in government have been supporting the fiction of a Trust Fund for too many years.

Secondly, the maiden proposal is to allow the option, not the requirement, for tax-payers to put 4% to 12.5% of their FICA tax into their own personal retirement accounts with a cap of $1,000 a year rising $100 a year thereafter. Talk about going slow, this is a very soft first step! Funds will still be available for current retirees through the remainder of FICA collected plus selling more bonds to finance the transition.

Can we Afford the Transition?
Good old Uncle Sam has a net worth of about $50 trillion, ($80 trillion in assets minus $30 trillion in debt). Social Security reform is slated to cost approximately $2 trillion or about $200 billion a year over a number of transition years. To bring it down to numbers we can recognize, it is equivalent to saying; – does someone with a net worth of $50,000 have enough credit-rating to borrow $200 a year. The answer is, well in most cases, yes.

How will it Affect your Investments?
No one really knows what private Social Security accounts will do to the Financial Markets. Three things come to mind. First, we can only surmise that it, like tax-reform, it will increase the savings rate in America. If more savings are available then more capital will be available for future growth productivity growth. More savings also provide a buffer to inflationary tendencies in the economy since it mitigates shortages in the money supply.

Second, reducing retiree and other recipient’s dependence on the government can only foster more self-reliance and accountability on a public and governmental scale. Social Security individual fraud and governmental fraud would cease to exist when you take the government out of the game. The fictitious Trust Fund, that never existed anyway, would no longer be a source of extra borrowing for the government.

Thirdly, the influx of money may give certain markets increased demand and thus an increase in prices. This, steroid-like, shot in the arm may or may not have lasting effects as the initial exuberant run-up wears off.
Social Security, - it's time to change it. Perhaps more insidious and damaging, if we have no reform we can look forward to more taxes and more governmental hiding behind FICA spending. Hopefully, this administration may be our last hope if it has the fortitude to ignore the duplicity of fear mongers and get the job done.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home