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Shortchanging seniors

Posted: March 7, 2013 - 5:34pm

To the let’s-cut-entitlements crowd, what’s wrong with America is that seniors are living too high off the hog. With the cost of medical care still rising (though not as fast as it used to), the government is shelling out many more dollars per geezer (DPG) than it is per youngster (DPY). The solution, we’re told, is to bring down DPG so we can boost DPY.

We do indeed need to boost DPY. And we need to rein in medical costs by shifting away from the fee-for-service model of billing and paying. But as for changing the way we calculate cost-of-living adjustments for seniors to keep us from overpaying them – an idea beloved of Bowles, Simpson, Republicans and, apparently, the White House – this may not be such a hot idea, for one simple reason: An increasing number of seniors can’t afford to retire.

Nearly one in five Americans age 65 and over - 18.5 percent – were working in 2012, and that percentage has been rising steadily for nearly 30 years. In 1985, only 10.8 percent of Americans 65 and older were still on the job, and in 1995, that figure was 12.1 percent.

Both good news and bad news have contributed to this increase. The good news is that more seniors both can and want to work than in years past, as health care and medical science have extended their capabilities, and as the share of Americans in desk jobs has increased while the number on the factory floor has shrunk. A 2011 survey by the Society of Actuaries reported that 55 percent of working seniors said they had stayed employed because they wanted to stay active and involved. But the same survey showed that 51 percent were working because they needed the money.

What advocates for reducing Social Security adjustments fail to consider is that corporate America’s shift away from defined-benefit pensions to defined-contribution 401(k) plans – or to no retirement plans at all – has diminished seniors’ non-Social Security income and made the very idea of retirement a far more risky prospect. Today, more than half of U.S. workers have no workplace retirement plan. Of those who do, just 35 percent still have defined-benefit pensions. In 1975, 88 percent of workers with workplace retirement plans had defined-benefit pensions.

The shift from traditional pensions to 401(k)s is one of the main reasons most seniors aren’t able to set aside enough income to guarantee a secure retirement. A 2010 survey by the Federal Reserve found that the median amount saved through 401(k)s by households approaching retirement was $100,000 – not nearly enough to support those households through retirement years, as seniors’ life expectancy increases. And as most Americans’ wages continue to stagnate or decline, their ability to direct more of their income to 401ks diminishes even more.

With the eclipse of the defined- benefit pension, Social Security assumes an even greater role in the well-being of American seniors. But advocates of entitlement cuts don’t even discuss the waning of other forms of retirement security: Listening to Alan Simpson, you’d never know that America’s elderly aren’t getting the monthly pension checks their parents got.

And it’s not as if those employers are suffering. Just as U.S. businesses have been able to raise the share of corporate profits to a half-century high by reducing the share of their workers’ wages to a half-century low, so, too, their ability to reduce pension payments has contributed not just to their profits but also to the $1.7 trillion in cash on which they are currently sitting.

So here’s a modest plan to enable seniors to retire when they wish, rather than having to work into their 70s and even beyond: Require employers to put a small percentage of their revenue, and a small percentage of their workers’ wages, into a private, portable, defined-benefit pension plan. To offset the increased costs, transfer the costs of paying for workers’ health care from employers and employees to the government, and pay for the increased costs to the government with the kind of value-added tax that most European nations levy. (The tax burden is higher in Europe, but because the level of benefits is higher as well, the tax has wide public support.)

The odds of such a plan being enacted today, of course, are nil. (Then again, the odds of any bill getting through Congress these days are close to nil.) But until we compensate for, or reverse, the abdication of corporate America from any major role in providing its workers with retirement security, we should lay off monkeying with Social Security to reduce the program’s future payments. As for all those cash-drenched chief executives who proclaim that we must cut entitlements, how about they make up the difference by restoring the pensions their companies slashed?

Meyerson is editor-at-large of The American Prospect.

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Fair n Balanced
40535
Points
Fair n Balanced 03/07/13 - 11:12 pm
6
8

There you go lefters,

the BDD let a liberal rag spout baloney.

fishhead
5344
Points
fishhead 03/08/13 - 07:16 am
9
5

It seems that we value

It seems that we value investors more than we value American workers if you look at the tax code.

captron
25924
Points
captron 03/08/13 - 08:39 am
4
7

Now Veterans Groups are even getting fired up over Chain CPI

However , their ( sudden) new found interest is stated in a rather interesting way.

Their outrage begins with saying DAV future benefits would be curtailed , while not mentioning the same reduced payments would apply to military retirement benefits and on a larger scale every ones SSI benefits.

Their interesting new twist comes when they state , The President promised middle class Americans ( those earning below $ 250,000.00 Year !) no additional Fed Tax burden ? That is being proposed by republicons & some Democrats ?

Makes you wonder !

stevebusch
2997
Points
stevebusch 03/08/13 - 09:10 am
6
7

A recent poll of our four

A recent poll of our four children shows that 100% believe that they are rsponsible for their healthcare and their retirement funding. They are well aware that social security and o'bamacare are cruel jokes that should be ended immediately.They also know better than to associate or be seen with liberals.Love to all (nonlibs) - Steve

sadiemarriedlady
23375
Points
sadiemarriedlady 03/08/13 - 09:22 am
6
5

more votes

Same poll for our family 3 working adult children, 2 grandchildren under 20. All know they are responsible for their own healthcare and retirement funding.

The youngest ones are really irritated about Obamacare and the cost to all.
Our family members are friends with liberals but, not all talk politics with them. It depends on the friends and the age of the family member.

captron
25924
Points
captron 03/08/13 - 12:27 pm
5
6

Hey Kids , Talk to your Parents & get on the bandwagon now !

Get out there and really make a statement that proves your actually serious.
Sign my new pledge to NOT EVER sign up for Social Security payments or Medicare Health Coverage, be the first bunker dwellers on your block.

Let those 47 % ers choke on all that $$$$2.7 Trillion US dollars in the Social Security Trust Fund...

Yeah lets make a statement now !!!!

sadiemarriedlady
23375
Points
sadiemarriedlady 03/08/13 - 03:38 pm
4
7

Get serious

The first sign-up will be to not take the donation for social security and medicare out of your check. Then, you can sign up to not collect.

How many people who haven't donated to either are collecting social security and/or medicare?

How much do you think people in their 20's and 30's are going to be able to get back from their SS and medicare account? You can go ahead and think this is a joke b ut, if you looked into the funding you may learn something.

I can only hope that you want to learn.

Fair n Balanced
40535
Points
Fair n Balanced 03/08/13 - 01:41 pm
4
4

Well, Lil'Cappy,

all I want back is what they've taken from me all my life. That's not an entitlement payment it's paying me back.

captron
25924
Points
captron 03/08/13 - 02:17 pm
4
5

Maybe the Brain Trust has NOT Heard that increasing the Cap is

the fix ( from current ceiling to $ 200, 000 ) that maintains the Social Security Trust Fund solvency virtually forever.

One of several fixs that most are familiar with.( except Paul Ryan ( R ) WI )

But Im with the brain trust on this one , lets all sign the pledge- we wont take those benefits & then lets all stock up on ammo and canned food.
Let them come & get us....until we can form our own country , or Newt tells us there is room at the moon colony.

I bet those revenuers just hand out that $ 2.7 trillion dollar trust fund to a bunch of aliens , who just send it home to their drug cartels anyway.

sadiemarriedlady
23375
Points
sadiemarriedlady 03/08/13 - 03:52 pm
5
4

Braincap

The SS cap has been raised many times since social security began. You don't seem to have a real interest in learning why the program is where it is and what can be done.

By overstating the outcome of the raised cap,you are overlooking what could really help.

You're wandering in the wilderness.

Fair n Balanced
40535
Points
Fair n Balanced 03/08/13 - 05:29 pm
4
4

The first time I

hit that cap was in 1980 and they raised it right after that.

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