On Thursday the Social Security Administration announced that
for the third time in six years there will be no COLA (Cost Of Living
Adjustment) to beneficiaries’ checks next year. There was no COLA in
2010 or 2011, thanks to the government index used to determine whether
an “adjustment” (increase) was justified, to offset inflation. ~ Bob Adelmann
This
year’s culprit was the price of gasoline, which fell 23 percent, wiping
out any chance for an increase in the checks going to more than 60
million recipients.
Heroic and often invisible measures have been undertaken in recent
years to cover up the program’s insolvency: raising retirement ages,
increasing deductibles and co-pays in Social Security’s Medicare
program, and forcing recipients to make do with less.
According to the Senior Citizens League, those recipients have lost
nearly a fourth of their buying power over the last 15 years, thanks to
the rising cost of housing and medical expenses.
Since 2000, housing
costs for seniors have increased by 44 percent, heating oil by 159
percent, eggs by 117 percent, and gasoline by 76 percent. Since then,
however, Social Security’s COLAs have averaged just 2.2 percent per
year.
In 1972, Congress modified Social Security so that it would reflect
the loss of purchasing power of the dollar, resulting in the adoption of
the Consumer Price Index, or CPI.
At the time the index measured the
price increases (as a result of the inflation caused by the Federal
Reserve) of a market basket of goods and services bought by wage
earners.
Then in 1987, Congress, responding to pressure from constituents that
the CPI didn’t reflect the real cost of living of elderly people
receiving checks, directed the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) to
develop an alternate CPI for the elderly, called CPI-E. The BLS has been
“developing” that alternate ever since.
It remains under study today
with little chance of its adoption any time soon. The BLS has said,
however, that since retirees 65 and older spend more than twice as much
on healthcare, and those 75 and older spend nearly three times more on
healthcare than do wage earners, a COLA based upon the
theoretical/experimental CPI-E would have raised the annual increases by
at least 0.2 percent year.
That’s the very last thing supporters of the system want. They prefer to claim, as does the New York Times’
favorite establishment economist, Paul Krugman, that “Social Security
does not face a financial crisis; its long term funding shortfall could
easily be closed with modest increases in revenue.”
There are numerous problems with the system, but the primary one is
the continued unwillingness by statist apologists such as Krugman to
recognize the reality that it’s a government-mandated, forced extraction
of monies from wages before the wage earner ever sees his paycheck.
Forcing people to pay into the system is the immoral basis upon which
the entire edifice stands.
It hides behind such terms as “insurance” (as in Federal Insurance Contributions Act, or FICA) and “trust fund” (as in Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund),
neither of which describe the plan.
The reference to “insurance” is
flawed, as beneficiaries have no enforceable right to the funds in their
“account,” identified by their Social Security number.
The
so-called “trust fund” is filled with government IOUs, reflecting the
fact that the monies collected by force by the government have already
been spent by the government.
Social Security was never designed to be insurance, with reserves
backed by securities (as is the case with private insurance companies),
but is merely another tax to fund the government in exchange for
promises that could (and would) be broken at any time. As the Republican
Party’s platform for the 1936 presidential election stated,
The so-called reserve fund… is no reserve
at all, because the fund will contain nothing but the Government’s
promises to pay, while the taxes collected in the guise of premiums will
be wasted by the Government in reckless and extravagant political
schemes.
The program drew heavily from the machinations of one Charles Ponzi,
who promised his investors a 50-percent profit within 45 days, or a
100-percent profit within 90 days, by performing an arbitrage between
discounted postal reply coupons in other countries and redeeming them at
face value in the United States.
Of course, there was no arbitrage of
any kind — just a swindle: Early investors were paid off with the
contributions of later investors. Before it ended, those “investors”
lost $20 million in 1920 dollars. Today? About a quarter of a trillion
dollars.
Ponzi’s scheme failed when the flow of new investors into the scheme
slowed down, just as is happening currently with Social Security.
The New York Times
quoted Stephen Goss, the program’s chief actuary, who said that the
scheme’s most significant issue “is that fewer workers are paying taxes
into the program… while more retirees are collecting their checks.”
In
fact, that $20 million that Ponzi swindled from his “investors” is
pocket change compared to the scam now unfolding, and increasingly
coming to those beneficiaries’ attention.
When Boston University
Professor Laurence Kotlikoff looked behind the numbers, he discovered
the size of the deception:
Social Security’s 2015 Trustees Report
came out just last month [July, 2015]. It shows, in table VI F1 (which
is deeply buried in the Report’s appendix), that the system has a $25.8
trillion fiscal gap…
The $25.8 trillion fiscal gap… takes into account all future benefit outlays [promises] and all future taxes [extractions]…
What does Social Security’s $25.8 trillion
fiscal gap, which is far larger than our economy’s $18 trillion annual
GDP, mean, exactly? It means that… [to be solvent] it requires a 32
percent immediate and permanent hike in Social Security’s 12.4 percent
FICA tax.
Far be it from this humble scribe to suggest that Kotlikoff is wrong
in his numbers, but it is undeniably true that he is wrong in his
assumption that Social Security can be saved and become solvent.
A
system based on theft and fraud cannot be saved. It must be terminated
immediately — a suggestion strangely missing from public debate,
especially by Republican Party candidates such as New Jersey Governor
Chris Christie, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, and Senator Marco
Rubio, all three of whom think the scheme can be saved.
Suggestions by
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and former Maryland Governor Martin
O’Malley that taxes be raised on the rich also fall short of the mark:
The rich just aren’t that rich to fund the swindle’s staggering
shortfall.
October 19, 2015 – KnowTheLies
Source Article from http://www.knowthelies.com/node/10854
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