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My
name is Shara Esbenshade. I am a freshman at University
Laboratory High school and a member of the Uni High
Activism Club.
On
Tuesday, April 26th, President Bush presented his new
plan for Social Security to Congress. Although many
politicians, even republicans, and the public are
doubtful of privatizing social security, if this were to
be passed, the effects would be drastic.
Economically, the plan is not good for any working
person or for the country as a whole. The average worker
would lose $152,000 in guaranteed retirement benefits,
according to the American Federation of Labor-Congress
of Industrial Organizations, and even those that chose a
private account would have retirement benefits cut by
40%. Surveys show that most people do not possess the
basic knowledge necessary to profit off of the stock
market, so there would be only minimal growth in some
individual accounts, while others would lose money.
What’s more, is the transition to a new system would
cost an enormous amount. Since the Baby Boomer
generation will begin to retire in 2018, this new system
would immediately run out of money and be forced to
borrow from private accounts to pay the retirement
benefits. Overall, privatized social security could put
the country’s deficit at $4.9 trillion in debt (mostly
to foreign countries).
Second, the political consequences would not be pretty.
Privatized accounts would inevitably be accompanied by
political corruption. Large Wall Street investing firms
would profit greatly off of private accounts, and
politicians would have the power to decide which company
makes how much off of account fees. Also, the system
would require an entirely new branch of government
bureaucracy. Economist Francis X. Cavanaugh estimates
that 10,000 well-trained workers would have to be hired
to oversee the accounts and answer questions.
The
scariest effects, however, would be moral ones. First,
privatization would transform social security into an
institution where it’s each person for them self, and
destroy the idea of people caring for one another. In
addition, if social security were privatized, the
government could no longer be relied on to ensure that
people will receive money when they are in need. I
believe it is the government’s duty to provide for those
who aren’t able to do so for them selves. And it is the
citizens’ right to demand this of the government. If
people can’t be ensured economic protection from the
government, there will be no trust between citizen and
state, something that is vital to a healthy nation.
There
are simpler and less dismal ways of fixing social
security. If the unemployment rate were decreased by
just 1 or 2%, social security would receive enough money
to survive far into the foreseeable future. Another
possibility is to raise the $90,000 cap. Currently, if
someone makes over $90,000 a year, they still pay only
6.2% of $90,000 as social security tax and not 6.2% of
their actual salary. Ideally, this cap could be
eliminated, ensuring the survival of social security
forever.
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