Taxes on retirement withdrawals will be a major windfall for the Treasury. Let's use the money wisely.
You
know the safety net is in danger when lawmakers fire away and claim they’re
trying to save it.
On the first day of the new Congress, the House warned that
Social Security benefits might need “saving”.
The Congressional Budget Office
twice ran the numbers on “saving” Medicare by raising the starting age from 65
to 67. It’s a shame, the story goes, but the money just isn’t there.
It
isn’t? The far-sighted authors of the 1974 Employee Retirement Income Security
Act might beg to disagree. The bill created tax-deferred retirement savings
accounts, a landmark win for workers—and, over the long run, for the nation as
well. The Treasury is closing in on a golden payback, and it could make the
safety net much safer.
Let’s
follow the money, and see how the 1974 law is rewarding America. Then let’s see
how Congress could make the rewards even greater.
On
the front end of the retirement bargain, workers get decades of tax-free
investment. On the back end, they cash in but so does the Treasury: it gets
revenue each year from taxable withdrawals.
Payouts can begin at age 59 1/2 but
can be put off until age 70 1/2. From then on, minimum required distributions
(MRDs) kick in. Starting next year, it’s MRD time for an affluent
demographic—the best-off of the baby boomers, waiting as long as they legally
can to touch their retirement nest eggs.
Congress
should dedicate those receipts to shoring up the safety net. It’s only fitting
that revenues generated by retirement accounts should be reinvested in the
safety net; after all, that’s what the 1974 bill set out to strengthen.
In
addition, to lessen the long-range fiscal threat, lawmakers could take an
effectively painless step. They could revisit the MRD rules, and make two
changes that would raise added revenue without raising taxes. Here they are,
and the policy reasons for making them:
65,
not 70 1/2: It never made fiscal sense for MRDs to begin at age 70 1/2; it
makes no sense for the common good either. Gradually, say in half-year
increments, move up the starting age to 65. When it’s Medicare time, it’s also
time to begin paying back Uncle Sam for those retirement tax breaks (and
helping Medicare in the process).
Raise
the percentages: The withdrawal rates for MRDs start out low and creep up
slowly. The formula that applies to most accounts calls for a starting MRD of
under 3.7 percent. Twenty-five years later, at age 95, the rate is just 11.6
percent. Congress should phase in higher rates for required withdrawals.
The
social contract would reach a new level of fairness: by paying back faster for
their tax breaks, recipients of MRDs could help shore up Medicare, Social
Security, whatever. (No, higher rates wouldn’t cause retirees to exhaust
their savings.
If MRDs were doubled, the rate at age 95 would still be only
23.2 percent—leaving 76.8 percent still invested. Minimum distributions can’t
clean out accounts; only larger, voluntary withdrawals can do that.)
Speeding
up MRDs would hurt no-one. It would help millions. It would raise billions. It
would also pour more money into the economy, and likely create more jobs as
well.
The
United States is the richest country in the world. Politicians should stop
poor-mouthing the safety net, and use some of our riches to mend it. The coming
windfall from boomer MRDs would be a good place to start.
Gerald
E. Scorse helped pass the bill requiring basis reporting for capital gains. He
writes on taxes.