By PAUL
KRUGMAN
For many
years there has been one overwhelming rule for people who wanted to be
considered serious inside the Beltway. It was this: You must declare your
willingness to cut Social Security in the name of “entitlement reform.” It
wasn’t really about the numbers, which never supported the notion that Social
Security faced an acute crisis. It was instead a sort of declaration of
identity, a way to show that you were an establishment guy, willing to impose
pain (on other people, as usual) in the name of fiscal responsibility.
But a funny
thing has happened in the past year or so. Suddenly, we’re hearing open
discussion of the idea that Social Security should be expanded, not cut. Talk
of Social Security expansion has even reached the Senate, with Tom Harkin
introducing legislation that would increase benefits. A few days ago Senator
Elizabeth Warren gave a stirring floor speech making the case for expanded
benefits.
Where is
this coming from? One answer is that the fiscal scolds driving the
cut-Social-Security orthodoxy have, deservedly, lost a lot of credibility over
the past few years. (Giving the ludicrous Paul Ryan an award for fiscal
responsibility? And where’s my debt crisis?) Beyond that, America’s overall
retirement system is in big trouble. There’s just one part of that system
that’s working well: Social Security. And this suggests that we should make
that program stronger, not weaker.
Before I get
there, however, let me briefly take on two bad arguments for cutting Social
Security that you still hear a lot.
One is that
we should raise the retirement age — currently 66, and scheduled to rise to 67
— because people are living longer. This sounds plausible until you look at
exactly who is living longer. The rise in life expectancy, it turns out, is
overwhelmingly a story about affluent, well-educated Americans. Those with
lower incomes and less education have, at best, seen hardly any rise in life expectancy
at age 65; in fact, those with less education have seen their life expectancy
decline.
So this
common argument amounts, in effect, to the notion that we can’t let janitors
retire because lawyers are living longer. And lower-income Americans, in case
you haven’t noticed, are the people who need Social Security most.
The other
argument is that seniors are doing just fine. Hey, their poverty rate is only 9
percent.
There are
two big problems here. First, there are well-known flaws with the official
poverty measure, and these flaws almost surely lead to serious understatement
of elderly poverty. In an attempt to provide a more realistic picture, the
Census Bureau now regularly releases a supplemental measure that most experts
consider superior — and this measure puts senior poverty at 14.8 percent, close
to the rate for younger adults.
Furthermore,
the elderly poverty rate is highly likely to rise sharply in the future, as the
failure of America’s private pension system takes its toll.
When you
look at today’s older Americans, you are in large part looking at the legacy of
an economy that is no more. Many workers used to have defined-benefit
retirement plans, plans in which their employers guaranteed a steady income
after retirement. And a fair number of seniors (like my father, until he passed
away a few months ago) are still collecting benefits from such plans.
Today,
however, workers who have any retirement plan at all generally have
defined-contribution plans — basically, 401(k)’s — in which employers put money
into a tax-sheltered account that’s supposed to end up big enough to retire on.
The trouble is that at this point it’s clear that the shift to 401(k)’s was a
gigantic failure. Employers took advantage of the switch to surreptitiously cut
benefits; investment returns have been far lower than workers were told to
expect; and, to be fair, many people haven’t managed their money wisely.
As a
result, we’re looking at a looming retirement crisis, with tens of millions of
Americans facing a sharp decline in living standards at the end of their
working lives. For many, the only thing protecting them from abject penury will
be Social Security. Aren’t you glad we didn’t privatize the program?
So there’s
a strong case for expanding, not contracting, Social Security. Yes, this would
cost money, and it would require additional taxes — a suggestion that will
horrify the fiscal scolds, who have been insisting that if we raise taxes at
all, the proceeds must go to deficit reduction, not to making our lives better.
But the fiscal scolds have been wrong about everything, and it’s time to start
thinking outside their box.
Realistically,
Social Security expansion won’t happen anytime soon. But it’s an idea that
deserves to be on the table — and it’s a very good sign that it finally is. (http://www.nytimes.com)
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