In the richest country in the world,
it's downright insane to even consider cutting back on benefits necessary to
provide a dignified retirement for hard-working Americans.
Rhonda
Straw is one of millions of Americans who do important work every day but still
have a hard time saving for retirement. As a home health aide, Straw administers
medication, changes bandages, and performs other vital services to the elderly
and disabled. With an hourly wage of only $9, Straw, 51, expects to rely almost
entirely on Social Security when she retires.
Unfortunately,
workers like Straw aren’t big players in the Social Security debate. The
Business Roundtable, the club for America’s most powerful corporate CEOs, is
using its muscle to push for an increase in the retirement age to 70 and to
recalculate inflation in a way that would further reduce benefits. Fix the Debt
is another CEO-driven outfit that’s throwing around tens of millions of dollars
in a campaign to cut Social Security and Medicare.
Compared
to ordinary workers like Rhonda Straw, these CEOs have virtually no skin in the
Social Security debate. To illustrate the disparity, we compared her situation
to that of two health industry CEOs who are active with both the Business
Roundtable and Fix the Debt.
In
the richest country in the world, it’s downright insane to even consider
cutting back on benefits necessary to provide a dignified retirement for
hard-working Americans.
The
United States already has a poverty rate among the elderly of 24 percent. That
puts us much closer to our southern neighbor Mexico, which has a 28 percent
rate, than our northern neighbor, Canada, where only 6 percent of the elderly
live in poverty.
If
we’re serious about preserving Social Security for years to come, there are far
more sensible approaches. One practical step would be to eliminate the cap on
wages subject to Social Security taxes.
Currently, the first $110,100 of an
American worker’s wage income is subject to a 10.4 percent Social Security tax.
This means that CEOs who make exorbitant pay stop paying into the system
shortly after New Year’s Day.
Honeywell
CEO David Cote, for example, paid only about $11,107 into the system last year.
If the cap were lifted, he would have paid $2.6 million in Social Security
taxes. And Cote could well afford it. He already has $25.1 million in his
company retirement fund.
The Congressional Research Service has determined that such a reform would
eliminate 95 percent of the expected Social Security shortfall over the next 75
years.
Next
time you see one of these CEOs on TV lecturing about belt-tightening, keep in
mind who’s talking. The stakes in this debate are extremely high for ordinary
Americans who work hard every day but still have to worry about their
retirement security.
For CEOs with mega-million retirement funds, there’s not
much to lose.
Sarah
Anderson is an Institute for Policy Studies fellow and the co-author of the new
report, Inequality in the Social Security Debate. IPS-dc.org Distributed via OtherWords. OtherWords.org