9.23.02 @ 12:02AM
Falling stock prices have not removed the need for personal retirement accounts.
As major stock market indices plummeted over the past several
months, opponents of voluntary Social Security personal accounts
have grown visibly gleeful, hoping that public enthusiasm for
personal accounts will follow the markets downward. If we had
implemented accounts a few years ago, they warn, tens of billions
of dollars would have been lost. The truth, however, is that the
recent bear market shows how strong the idea of personal accounts
is. While skeptics gloat about the plunging Dow Jones index,
personal accounts pass the test of a bear market with flying
colors.
Social Security's current "pay-as-you-go" financing will
inevitably require reform as teems of baby boomers retire and the
number of workers remaining to support them shrinks. One element of
many reform proposals is personal retirement accounts, which would
give workers the option to invest a portion of their payroll taxes
in stock and bond mutual funds. Those funds, which earn much higher
returns than the current program, could help make balancing Social
Security's books less painful. President Bush made personal
accounts a centerpiece of his presidential campaign, but reform
opponents now see the idea turning around to bite him.
Yet even in a market environment seemingly tailor-made for
opponents of reform, personal accounts would pay substantially
higher retirement benefits than the current Social Security program
while giving workers ownership and control over their savings.
Stock returns have averaged 7 percent after inflation throughout
American history. Even after the recent market drop, a worker
retiring today and holding only stocks in his account would have
received about 6% annual returns, far above the 2.5% return an
average couple can expect from Social Security (even after
including all survivors and disability benefits). Higher rates of
return, compounded over decades, could double or even triple a
worker's retirement nest egg and make addressing Social Security's
financing problems easier.
However bad the market's recent performance, a worker retiring
today would have begun investing in the late 1950s when the Dow was
one-tenth its current value. Over 20-year periods, the stock market
has never once lost money. And even a worker retiring in the Great
Depression would have received a 4% average return. Over the long
term, stocks have been less risky investments than supposedly
"safe" government bonds.
Even so, most workers diversify as they age, so their retirement
future would not be completely dependent on stock performance.
Diversification limited most investment losses from 5 to 10 percent
last year, even as most stock indices plummeted. According to a
2000 study, a typical worker in his 60s has only 40 percent of his
401(k) account in stocks. Such a worker would have lost 3.25
percent last year because bond prices rose while stocks fell. Lower
income workers held even less stock, and would actually have made
money in the past year. That's the power of diversification.
As important, personal accounts would be voluntary. No worker
would be forced to take an account, and no worker with an account
would be forced to invest a penny in the stock market. Under plans
from President Bush's reform commission, all workers over age 55
would remain in the current system and receive every penny they're
promised. Current and near-retirees have nothing to fear from
reform, while younger workers would finally have a choice.
Choice, control, and ownership are what keep Americans
supporting personal accounts even when the politicians and pundits
get the jitters. A Zogby International poll conducted for the Cato
Institute July 8-12 -- a period when the Dow Jones Industrials
Index fell almost 700 points -- shows 68 percent of likely voters
supporting voluntary personal accounts. That's up from 54 percent
in mid-1999, when the Dow was near its peak.
Despite the market, 55 percent of working-age voters think
personal accounts are less risky than the current system, which
will not remain solvent unless Congress adopts substantial tax
increases or benefit reductions. By a two-to-one margin, likely
voters think the lesson of the Enron scandal is that workers need
more control over their retirement savings, including personal
accounts for Social Security, not that markets are dangerous and
that accounts shouldn't be allowed. Individual control is a
recurring theme.
An idea shows its strength when times seem the toughest. For a
proposal to let workers invest part of their Social Security taxes
in the stock market, these would seem to be tough times. But even
today, personal accounts would increase Americans' retirement
income. And even today, Americans support them. That's why today's
stock market doesn't contradict the case for personal accounts. It
confirms it.
topics:
Taxes, Social Security, Environment, Books