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( OT ) Current state of SS
The trustees report on the financial state of Social Security was
released yesterday but you don't need to read it to understand the most important part of the ongoing debate: President Bush's privatization plan makes Social Security's financial problems worse (http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstrac...0894DD4044 82) .. And despite what you may have read in your local newspaper this morning ( here (http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansas...s/11213092.htm) , here (http://www.freep.com/money/business/...e_20050324.htm) , here (http://www.sun-sentinel.com/business...ness-headlines) and here (http://news.bostonherald.com/politic...rticleid=74759) , for example), Social Security is not going broke in 2041. Rather, according to the most recent Social Security trustees report, the program will be able to pay full benefits to all beneficiaries until that date without any reforms. (Five years ago, the trustees predicted that the program would be able to pay out full benefits until 2037, so -- despite the scare tactic by those eager to privatize the program -- its financial condition has actually been improving (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...05Mar23_2.html) .) BUSH HAS NO PLAN FOR THE BIGGER PROBLEM: There are five trustees, three from the Bush administration and two who are independent. The two independent trustees -- Republican Thomas R. Saving and Democrat John L. Palmer -- weren't invited to the press conference (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...2005Mar23.html) announcing the release of the new report. Apparently, they weren't on message. Saving and Palmer noted that, over their five year tenure, the finances of Social Security have improved. According to Saving and Palmer, the more pressing issue is how to affordably meet our obligation to provide health care to the poor and the elderly in the coming decades. American Progress released its plan to do so yesterday, in the context of a fully-financed universal health care plan (http://www.americanprogress.org/site...J8OVF&b=477169) . President Bush has no plan. PRIVATIZATION MAKES THINGS WORSE: The Bush administration has already tried to use privatization to control the costs of an entitlement program. It's been a disaster. In 2003 the president and his right-wing allies jammed through Congress the Medicare Modernization Act -- which provided massive subsidies and overpayments to HMOs and the pharmaceutical industry in an effort to rely more on the private sector and "control costs." Using the administration's favorite metric, the administration's 2003 changes alone now " ha[ve] an unfunded liability of $18.2 trillion projected out infinitely (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...2005Mar23.html) ." Since the administration's 2003 changes, the exhaustion date for the Medicare trust fund has worsened by six years (http://www.cms.hhs.gov/publications/...ort/tr2003.pdf) . |
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