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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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1990
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<text>
<title>
(Feb. 19, 1990) Social Security:Dirty Little Secret
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Feb. 19, 1990 Starting Over
The American Economy
</history>
<link 00012>
<link -0001>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 48
Dirty Little Secret
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A plan for cutting Social Security taxes exposes the true size
of the deficit
</p>
<p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Dan Goodgame and Hays Gorey/
Washington
</p>
<p> Now that the "evil empire" has become the beleaguered
empire, nothing scares Washington more than the specter of a
battle over Social Security. Even the subtlest effort to tinker
with this most sacrosanct of federal benefit programs ignites
the rage of senior citizens, whose lobbying groups are among
the most feared in the nation. Senator Daniel Patrick
Moynihan's proposal to cut the Social Security payroll tax and
stop using the enormous funds it generates to disguise the size
of the federal budget deficit is anything but subtle. It is so
explosive that Republicans and Democrats alike are running from
the idea with their heads down and their hands clamped over
their ears.
</p>
<p> Unfortunately for the politicians, getting away from the
issue is not that simple. Though no one expects any drastic
change in the program, Moynihan's proposal has focused
attention on one of Washington's dirty little secrets. Rather
than dealing honestly with the budgetary gap, the Government
is once again borrowing against the future. When the baby-boom
generation begins to retire about 20 years from now, the IOUs
will have to be paid back through sharply higher taxes or still
more borrowing.
</p>
<p> Igniting a fire storm is precisely what Moynihan had in mind
last December when he suggested rolling back the most recent
hike in Social Security taxes. On Jan. 1 the rate climbed to
7.65% on the first $51,300 of a worker's income, a sum that
employers must match. Moynihan would lower it to 7.51% this
year and to 6.55% in 1991.
</p>
<p> The New York Democrat is a former Harvard professor with a
knack for stirring up controversy. As Assistant Secretary in
Lyndon Johnson's Labor Department, he kicked up a fuss by
issuing a hotly disputed report on female-headed black
families. Five years later, as Richard Nixon's adviser on
domestic policy, he urged "benign neglect" on racial issues,
meaning that the Administration should let racial controversy
cool before launching new civil rights initiatives. In the case
of Social Security, Moynihan admits that he was out to attract
notice through the political equivalent of hitting Congress
over the head with a two-by-four. Says he: "You have to get
their attention."
</p>
<p> He succeeded beyond his wildest dreams, in the process
flipping ordinary notions of national politics upside down. For
once, Democrats were in the position of presenting themselves
as tax cutters. But after initially expressing interest in
Moynihan's plan, many Democrats by last week were giving it a
wary, and sometimes hostile, second look. Speaker of the House
Tom Foley expressed "reservations" about the idea. Ways and
Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski, a Chicago Democrat who has
felt the wrath of senior-citizens groups over the
catastrophic-health-care surtax, dubbed the proposal a
"disaster." Democrats feared that the budget squeeze on other
domestic programs, already harsh, would be still worse if the
Government had to go hunting for billions to replace the lost
Social Security revenue.
</p>
<p> The Democratic retreat created an opening for gleeful
Republicans, who found themselves in the unaccustomed role of
Social Security's staunchest defenders. Says a Republican
leader: "As usual, [the Democrats] began flapping around and
knocking each other down like the F Troop of politics." To the
consternation of Democratic leaders, G.O.P. lawmakers began
distributing campaign buttons with the slogan SAVE SOCIAL
SECURITY. VOTE REPUBLICAN. George Bush also weighed in,
repeating the pledge made in his State of the Union Address that
he would not "mess around" with Social Security. "This is an
effort to get me to try to raise taxes on the American people
by the charade of cutting them, or to cut benefits," said Bush.
</p>
<p> Still, the fact that some Republicans had been caught up in
the initial fascination with the Moynihan plan led the White
House to launch a hasty counterattack. Budget Director Richard
Darman presented Congress with a plan for a Social Security
Integrity and Debt Reduction Fund that would require the
Federal Government to gradually stop using the surplus to cover
Government operating costs. The plan would not begin to take
effect, however, until after the 1992 presidential election,
and then only in stages. "Phased integrity," Republican Senate
Leader Bob Dole mischievously called it.
</p>
<p> Some integrity is badly needed right now. Until 1983, Social
Security was run on a pay-as-you-go basis, with payroll taxes
bringing in roughly the same amount that was disbursed as
benefits. But that year a bipartisan commission--on which
Moynihan played a key role--designed a scheme to build a
surplus that could swell to $4 trillion by 2010. The money
would come from a series of increases in Social Security
contributions, which began to phase in six years ago, and from
taxing the benefits of higher-income retirees.
</p>
<p> The idea was to avoid burdening the far smaller generation
that will follow the baby boomers with huge tax increases or
a mountain of new debt. But the intentions of the reform plan
were thwarted by the explosive growth of the deficit. Instead
of accumulating a stash of savings, the Government has borrowed
each year the surplus to pay for the normal operations of the
U.S. Government, with no plan for repaying the loans. "It is
like an individual having a private pension fund consisting of
his own IOUs," writes economist Paul Craig Roberts, a Treasury
official during the Reagan Administration.
</p>
<p> Just how embedded this budgetary sleight of hand has become
was illustrated during hearings by the Senate Finance Committee
last week. U.S. Comptroller General Charles A. Bowsher
described how the Government moved $52 billion from the Social
Security trust funds, as well as $71 billion from other
Government trust funds, to give the impression that the 1989
federal deficit was $152 billion. The real figure: $275 billion.
</p>
<p> Fearful that voters may eventually demand an end to the
shell game, Senators and Congressmen from both sides of the
aisle are racing to offer alternatives to Moynihan's proposal.
Some of the trial balloons:
</p>
<p>-- Wisconsin Republican Senator Robert Kasten would adopt
a smaller and more gradual payroll-tax reduction, while
removing the trust funds from the rest of the budget
calculation and outlawing Social Security benefit cuts.
</p>
<p>-- Congressman Hank Brown, a Colorado Republican, wants to
suspend the 1990 tax hike and make Social Security an
independent agency so that, he says, "no one can get their
hands on it--not even Congress."
</p>
<p>-- The most drastic approach comes from Congressman John
Porter, an Illinois Republican. He suggests that the Federal
Government each year refund the Social Security surplus into
Individual Social Security Retirement Accounts. Every worker
could direct his account, like an IRA, into an array of
nonspeculative investments, including Government bonds or
certain mutual funds. The result, says Porter, would be a
system of "vested, fully funded, worker-owned retirement
accounts"--though one in which the more successful investors
would reap the larger benefits in the end.
</p>
<p> Porter's plan might also negate one of the most important
advantages of the current system: higher rates of return to
low-income workers. In the present setup, minimum-wage earners
who contribute to Social Security over a full work life receive
benefits of about 60% of their average monthly earnings before
retirement. But workers who earn the maximum amount subject to
Social Security taxes get benefits of about 27% of monthly
earnings. Such redistributive payments are badly needed by most
Social Security recipients, despite the overall increase in
wealth among those 65 or older. A 1984 federal study shows that
Social Security provides at least half the household income for
62% of its beneficiaries, who also receive Medicare to cover
their health-care costs. "We hear so much about Social Security
being regressive," says Phil Gambino, a spokesman for the
program. "Actually, the benefits are progressive."
</p>
<p> Precisely because Moynihan's proposal might prove
irresistible if it ever came to a vote, congressional leaders
will try to prevent it from reaching the floor. But the plan
has already accomplished much of what Moynihan set out to
achieve. It has exposed the gimmickry that camouflages the true
size of the budget gap. It could make it more difficult to
continue those accounting tricks. By forcing Bush to oppose a
tax cut that would benefit most workers, it has complicated the
President's push for a reduction in the capital-gains tax that
would reward mainly those with incomes of $200,000 or more--and, after an initial surge of new revenues, add billions to
the deficit. Last but not least, it has put Daniel Patrick
Moynihan back in the position he most enjoys: at the very
center of a great and swirling national debate.
</p>
</body>
</article>
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