A Wall Street Boost for Social Security
By Gerald Scorse, Progressive Charlestown guest columnist
The aging of America is putting the squeeze on Social
Security. About 10,000 baby boomers turn 65 every day and the number is heading
even higher. Ready or not, our retirement system faces its first major overhaul
in decades.
Lawmakers should listen to Warren Buffett before they settle
on any new payroll tax or benefit schedules.
“I’m a card-carrying capitalist,” Buffett says, “I believe we wouldn’t be sitting here except for the market system.”
“I’m a card-carrying capitalist,” Buffett says, “I believe we wouldn’t be sitting here except for the market system.”
Social Security should become a
card-carrying capitalist too. It should invest part of its $2.8
trillion trust fund in the stock market,
specifically in broad-based, low-cost index funds.
Call it a Wall Street boost for Social Security. It could make the coming overhaul less costly for workers and employers alike. It would effectively give tens of millions of low- to middle-income workers their first share ever in the market. Lastly, it’s the smart thing to do: research has shown the reward easily justifies the risk.
Trust fund dollars have always
been invested in ultra-safe government securities. The idea of seeking higher
returns by putting some of the money into stocks has been proposed before, but it’s
never gone anywhere.
The coming reform (the first
since 1983 and only the second ever) gives Congress a chance to begin making up
for lost time.
And for lost opportunities too.
By mid-March of 2019, the S&P 500 had risen by more than 300 percent from
its financial-crisis low in March 2009. According to Goldman Sachs, the
index’s annualized gain of over 15 percent represents one of its best decades
ever.
The huge bull run didn’t add a
penny to the Social Security trust fund. In fact the fund’s return over the same
decade was lower than usual: many of its holdings were paying (and still are)
abnormally low interest rates.
All the more reason to make sure
a stock market boost becomes part of the overhaul. Let’s give the trust fund
its first chance for substantial gains. Let’s keep pushing back the year the
fund runs dry. The program’s trustees now estimate it’ll happen in
2035. If Congress doesn’t act before then, benefits will have to be cut by
roughly 25 percent.
Both parties are well aware of
the crunch. As usual these days, they’re gridlocked on what to do.
Republicans think the problem
can be solved with just two words: stingier and shorter. Their proposals would
hit future recipients with the double whammy of lower benefits and a later retirement age (an idea
Buffett has also floated).
Democrats have lined up solidly
behind a bill that goes in the
opposite direction. It increases payouts by two percent and sweetens the
formula for cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs). The money to pay for it would
come from higher payroll taxes, especially on the biggest earners.
Payroll taxes are currently not
collected on wages greater than $132,900. The Democratic bill would tax all
earnings over $400,000. The rate itself (levied on both workers and employers)
would rise 0.1 percent per year from 2020 to 2043, going from the current 6.2
percent to 7.4 percent. The system’s actuaries say these changes would keep the
fund solvent into the 2090s.
All well and good, but adding a
Wall Street boost could make the reform even better. The tax increase could be
smaller. The trust fund’s solvency could be extended into the 22nd
century. Millions of workers without workplace retirement plans could reap some
of the same stock market gains as workers who have them.
Alicia H. Munnell lives and
breathes retirement policy. It was her calling card for a top job in the
Clinton Administration. Since then she’s been a professor at Boston College,
where she founded and directs its Center for Retirement Research. In 2006 she co-authored
the definitive book Social Security and the Stock Market.
It’s a probing, scholarly work.
It doesn’t minimize the risks, including the political risks of putting the
government in charge of investment decisions. It cites hundreds of facts,
including these:
“After all, stocks yield 7
percent after inflation and bonds only 3 percent.”
“Two types of government
pensions in the United States already invest in equities with no apparent ill
effects,” the Thrift Savings Program for federal employees and state and local
pension funds.
Adding the Social Security trust
fund to the list would make that three. As Warren Buffett knows, it’s really no
more than a bet on the future of America. If that’s not a good bet, what is?
This article first appeared
at www.nydailynews.com.
Scorse writes on taxes.