The Star blocks commentary that goes against its biases. The paper has long misrepresented and campaigned against the Social Security system. They will print things sent by those who oppose Social Security and those who would profit from privatizing the program.
Professor Skidmore is an expert on the topic and has written two excellent books on the subject of Social Security. His first was entitled, "Social Security and its Enemies." His follow-up book is entitled "Securing America's Future" Both are well worth reading for anyone who truly wants to understand the history of the program and how it works. Social Security is a very successful "Insurance program" that over fifty million people rely upon for their retirement and for beneficiaries.
The following was written as an Op Ed. piece to the Star. The Star routinely prints editorials submitted by such right-wing think tanks as the Cato Institute and the Heritage Foundation, both founded by wealthy men with right-wing agendas. Originally, the Heritage Foundation was funded by Joseph Coors of the Coors brewing company. Others such as Richard Mellon Scaife, the billionaire newspaper publisher, has joined the organization. Edward Crane, a libertarian and Charles Koch of Koch industries founded the Cato Institute in 1977. The Koch brothers, worth around 40 billion dollars own the second largest privately held corporation in the United States. These very wealthy men and their so-called think tanks are dead set on destroying every worthwhile program, including Social Security, that helps working class Americans.
The Op Ed piece below was written in response to a banker who wrote an editorial claiming the Social Security is a Ponzi scheme and should be privatized:
On September 2, the Star published an article, “Time to Create Some Real Security,” by Chuck Mikkelsen, identified as “a bank vice president.” Mikkelsen recycles the common arguments against Social Security. It is surprising that there has not been an answer, because each of his arguments is wrong.
He says the “trust fund” is “nothing more than government IOUs,” but so is every dollar that circulates, and so is every Treasury security. He says that Social Security taxes are not invested, when, in fact, they are invested in government bonds. These bonds regularly pay interest back into the trust funds.
He denies that Treasury securities represent “real value” to Social Security. If Treasuries had no “value,” though, banks and pension funds would not invest in them.
He recklessly throws around the political talking point that Social Security is a “Ponzi scheme.” If it were, it could not have paid benefits regularly for more than 70 years. A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investment arrangement that promises huge returns in a brief period. It is unsustainable, because to fulfill its promises of wealth, it requires new investors at a geometrically increasing rate, an obvious impossibility.
Social Security, in contrast, is not an investment scheme, and does not promise quick wealth or extravagant gains. It does not require a geometric increase in the number of new participants. There is no promoter using the system for personal enrichment. It is simply a generation taking care of its dependents.
Our wealthy society is certainly able to take care of its own. The issue is one of political will, not of economics. As the most affluent society in history, the United States of America can do nearly anything economically that it chooses to do. Any changes that Social Security may require in future years will be well within the capacity of our economy to handle. Moreover, it is impossible for the U.S. Government literally to “run out of money.” We do not function in the Euro zone. So long as we control our own currency and pay our bills and debts in dollars, we literally cannot “run out.”
Mikkelsen resorts to an old slander when he claims Social Security is racist. He says Blacks and Hispanics have shorter life spans, and then draws the ridiculous conclusion that they collect “few, or no, retirement benefits.”
Even if there were not huge numbers of Blacks and Hispanics retiring on Social Security, this argument overlooks the enormous benefits that the system pays to non-retirees. Groups with shorter life spans will receive more benefits for children and for widows or widowers. These groups may also have higher rates of disability payments. Mikkelsen may not know that nearly one-third of all Social Security checks go to younger people, rather than to retirees.
The argument that the number of retirees is overwhelming the number of workers has been completely discredited. A more meaningful measure is the “dependency ratio”—the percentage of people in the work force as opposed to those not in the work force. That ratio is projected actually to be more favorable in 2030 than it was in 1965 (44% in the workforce in 2030 vs. 37% in 1965).
Yes, the population is aging, but we must remember that Social Security is not only a retirement plan. It also provides benefits for the disabled, for children of deceased wage earners, and for the caregivers of those children. We must also remember that Social Security is far more efficient than any private system. It operates with tiny administrative costs (less than 1%) that no private system can match. An often overlooked fact is that it provides protection against inflation, as private arrangements do not.
So, in response to the implication that 401Ks—or privatization in any form—might be better, just ask any former employee of Enron whether he or she will receive more from Social Security, or from the 401K plans that turned out to be worthless promises.
Max J. Skidmore
Curators’ Professor of Political Science
UMKC