By William Tucker on 3.18.05 @ 12:09AM
Republicans have one chance to save Social Security reform.
By now the battle lines in the Social Security contest seem
pretty well drawn. The Republicans keep putting things on the table
-- giving ground inch by inch -- while the Democrats refuse even to
discuss the matter.
Clearly the Democrats have opted for a scorched earth strategy.
Their bet is they can stonewall and make Bush look like a failure.
So far it's working. If the President promises to do something
about what he calls a national crisis and doesn't deliver, then
it's his problem.
There is a way to turn the tables, however. The ugly truth is
this. One of the major reasons the problems created by Social
Security are invisible to the public is that Congress has been
embezzling the so-called "Trust Fund" for the past 37 years. Yes,
"embezzling" is the only word. (See my longer story on "The Right
Idea," at www.taemag.org.)
In 1968, Lyndon Johnson decided to hide the costs of the Vietnam
War and the Great Society by combining the federal budget and the
Social Security Trust. To that date they had been separate. This
was a classic "co-mingling of funds" of the kind that sends people
like Bernie Ebbers and Ken Lay to prison.
Instead of investing the money in an arm's-length transaction,
the President and Congress started pooling the two funds so the
Social Security surplus could reduce the federal deficit. That has
masked the crisis that Bush is now trying to get us to face. Every
year, Congress spends $120-$150 billion from the Social Security
Fund on federal programs. There is nothing collateralizing these
loans except a bunch of IOU's in a bank down in West Virginia --
special bonds that are not marketable and pay only about 1 percent
interest.
The "Social Security Crisis" will occur when, because of
demographic shifts, this annual surplus vanishes over the next
twelve years. Suddenly, Congress will no longer have that $100
billion to plug the budget gap every year. Next it will start
having to pay back the IOU's. Quick as a wink, that $100 billion
annual surplus will turn into a $200 billion-and-beyond annual
shortfall. That's when the federal budget starts to melt down. It's
inevitable when you open up the safe and find the CEO and board of
directors have been tapping the till all along.
So here's the thing to do. The Republicans should walk into
Congress next week and place a resolution on the table: "Stop the
embezzlement now!" The Social Security Trust should immediately be
put back in a separate account and invested in arm's-length
transactions. As Robert C. Pozen, chairman of MFS Investment
Management, suggested in the Wall Street Journal on
Tuesday, this would give the Social Security Trustees a legitimate
pot of money to begin paying the "transition costs" for dealing
with the underlying crisis -- the adverse demographics that will
make Social Security insolvent down the line.
Would it be painful? It certainly would. But that's the whole
point. Recovering from embezzlement is never easy. But it will
bring the problem to the fore and end the Democrats' gambit of
"there's-no-problem, we-don't-have-to-do-anything,
we-can-just-ignore-it."
It might even make private Social Security accounts start
looking like a sensible solution as well.
topics:
Federal Budget, Social Security