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Title: Rick Perry is Right: Social Security Really is a Ponzi Scheme
Source: Dissenting Opinions
URL Source: http://jwpegler.blogspot.com/2011/0 ... -is-right-social-security.html
Published: Sep 10, 2011
Author: Eric Blankenburg
Post Date: 2011-09-10 21:05:00 by jwpegler
Keywords: None
Views: 114512
Comments: 228

Rick Perry's comments during this week's GOP debate at the Reagan library has caused quite a stir in the liberal media.

During the debate, Governor Perry defended the words in his book, calling Social Security a "Ponzi scheme".

After the debate, the "analysis" on MSNBC was truly fun to watch as every commentator sat shelled shocked over the fact that a politician would dare to use these words to describe America's most sacred welfare program.

The only person on the panel who had a clue about what might be going on was Ed Schultz who at one point questioned whether or not whether young people would stick with Obama or jump on the Perry bandwagon.

Unlike the political and media establishment in this country, young people understand that they are going to get the short end of the Social Security "inter-generational compact". Schultz surprisingly realized that Perry's message might resonant with young people.

Let's take a quick look at the Social Security system and see if Perry might be on to something.

The people who got into the Social Security system very early got back on average 15 times the amount of money they paid in. They got a great deal and were raving proponents of the system.

The people receiving Social Security benefits today are getting back on average 2 1/2 to 3 times what they paid in. They are also generally strong proponents of the system.

Today, Social Security is paying out more every year than it takes it. We are borrowing money from the foreigners, like the Chinese and Saudis to pay current benefits. As the huge Baby Boom generation retires, the amount of debt we incur each year will quickly escalate until it blows up in our face and old people without resources really do wind up in the street.

So, what happens when my generation starts to retire in 15 to 20 years and what will happen to my kids?

We will all be left holding the bag.

There is a financial MODEL that describes this. The model is called a Pyramid scheme or Ponzi scheme or a Bernie Madoff scheme. The people who get it in early make out like bandits and the people who get it late get screwed.

That is exactly how the Social Security system will play out.

The fact is that the Social Security is a pay-as-you­-go welfare system that transfers money from young, struggling families to relatively well-to-do retired people. There isn't any "trust fund". The words "trust fund" are used to describe a mountain of debt. A mountain of debt is NOT a trust fund. It's a mountain of debt. Today, the mountain of debt in the Social Security system is so great that it cannot be paid.

Peel away the emotion, the Orwellian language about the "trust fund", and the other political rhetoric, and just look at the financial facts. Then this all becomes very clear.

Rick Perry is absolutely right and I am actually impressed that a politician would tell the truth about this. It's truly amazing.

The big question is what can be done?

Long term, people need to be able to save for their own retirements. Social Security needs to be taken back to it's roots as a program that supplements the income of retirees who are truly poor, through no fault of their own.

Today, 25% of people over 65 have pension or investment income that places them in the "wealthy" category. They still get Social Security benefits, so long as they don't work for their income. Why should young struggling families hand money over the wealthy retired people?

They shouldn't. Means testing Social Security will go a long way to make it solvent for the future.

When Social Security was implemente­d, the retirement age was 65. The average life expectancy was 59 for men and 61 for women. Most people didn't live long enough to get a check. Today, the retirement age is still 65. However, life expectancy is 73 for men and 78 for women.

The math just doesn't work.

We need to gradually raise the retirement age to keep up with life expectancy.

Bravo to Perry for telling it like it is. I certainly agree with Ed Schultz that a lot of young people will find this message appealing.

The other group who should find this message appealing are wealthy retirees who are stealing from their children's and grandchildren's future. Will they finally put their selfishness aside and say: "no more"? Probably not, but we'll see.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 177.

#1. To: All, sneakypete, hondo68, A K A Stone, BorisY, Captialist Eric, CZ82, Murran, no gnu taxes, nolu chan, e_type_jag, We The People (#0)

Ping

jwpegler  posted on  2011-09-10   21:11:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: jwpegler, e_type_jag, hondo68, lucysmom, nolu chan, NewsJunky, eskimo, mcgowanjm (#1)

The people who got into the Social Security system very early got back on average 15 times the amount of money they paid in. They got a great deal and were raving proponents of the system.

SS is a retirement insurance program - it does not function like a "Christmas club" account where after a period of deposits you get your money back when the day comes around.

You want a ponzi scheme? Invest in the private sector like Wall Street.

Godwinson  posted on  2011-09-11   14:30:04 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#34. To: Godwinson (#23)

SS is a retirement insurance program - it does not function like a "Christmas club" account

It is a government program and does not function like any commercial insurance program. With the government program, the "insurer" can change the benefits at any time and in any manner of its choosing. You can pay in for 40 years, retire, and the government may increase, decrease, or eliminate the benefits. There would be political consequences, but the government has the power to do it. An insurance company cannot unilaterally absolve itself of responsibility. The only government responsibility is to pay in accordance with the effective law, but they can always change the law.

The fund itself basically consists of bookkeeping entries. The money collected has been transferred to the general fund and spent. The government is over $14T in debt.

The amount in the fund, including any interest, is a bookkeeping entry. It is payable by the U.S. government. If the government does not have the funds, there are few ways to produce the funds on demand. They can just print money which acts like a tax, decreasing the value of all existing U.S. currency, and the value of all savings. They can collect the amount needed with revenue, but that is just handing the bill to the people to pay them what they are owed (or what is due by law). They could borrow the money, or perhaps sell some national infrastructure.

In its current form the system will go bust. Effective reform means changing the eligibility or benefits to reduce the overall payment to beneficiaries, or to increase the revenue stream coming in.

nolu chan  posted on  2011-09-11   18:28:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#81. To: nolu chan (#34) (Edited)

the "insurer" can change the benefits at any time and in any manner of its choosing

Its like an insurance program. No government program functions exactly like a private sector entity.

NewsJunky  posted on  2011-09-12   21:53:09 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#83. To: NewsJunky (#81)

Its like an insurance program. No government program functions exactly like a private sector entity.

It is also exhibits characteristics of a Ponzi scheme where early investors are paid with the money of later investors, and it works as long as the number of investors keeps increasing at the necessary rate. When the increase in new investors slows or stops, the system fails.

An insurance company cannot unilaterally void or change its liability. The government program (a "social compact") can be changed at the whim of the government and there is no legal recourse. The private insurer is subject to enforcement by the courts.

A government program or social compact is not an enforceable promise. It does not really equate to an enforceable contract in commerce, whether one chooses to compare it to a commercial retirement or insurance plan, or any other enforceable contract. It is a thing unto itself, based on the full faith of the government, and the credit of the government.

nolu chan  posted on  2011-09-12   22:37:06 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#84. To: nolu chan (#83)

It is also exhibits characteristics of a Ponzi scheme where early investors are paid with the money of later investors, and it works as long as the number of investors keeps increasing at the necessary rate. When the increase in new investors slows or stops, the system fails.

But the government can always make modifications to raise revenues. Real Ponzi Schemes always fall apart. There is no reason that Social Security must fail.

When the increase in new investors slows or stops, the system fails... It does not really equate to an enforceable contract in commerce, whether one chooses to compare it to a commercial retirement or insurance plan, or any other enforceable contract.

When an insurance company fails (revenue slows down too much), the state guarantee corporation must pay out benefits and may not pay out as much as originally insured for. Doesn't this indicate that private insurance does have certain characteristics of a Ponzi Scheme as well.

NewsJunky  posted on  2011-09-13   0:00:51 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#85. To: NewsJunky (#84)

But the government can always make modifications to raise revenues. Real Ponzi Schemes always fall apart. There is no reason that Social Security must fail.

When a Ponzi-like government program requires more money than the government can raise, the funding will fail. The government cannot raise infinite money just by passing confiscatory laws. When the program payments exceed what those paying in can provide, something has to give.

Governments can, and do, fail. Without change, the social security program will fail. The proportion of persons paying to persons receiving benefits is diminishing. At some point it becomes unsustainable.

When an insurance company fails (revenue slows down too much), the state guarantee corporation must pay out benefits and may not pay out as much as originally insured for. Doesn't this indicate that private insurance does have certain characteristics of a Ponzi Scheme as well.

I do not see the relationship between this and a Ponzi scheme. In any case, the State does not pay out the benefits from some existing fund. It sells the remaining pieces and pays pennies on the dollar and passes on the remainder of the expense to other surviving insurance companies.

http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_48/b4110100507198.htm

Insurance November 20, 2008, 5:00PM EST

Your Life Insurance Policy May Not Be Protected

Some major insurance companies are in trouble. If they fail, policyholders shouldn't count on guarantees

By Ben Levisohn

[excerpt]

When insurers do fail, state regulators sell off what they can and bill the remaining life insurers operating in that state to make policyholders whole. "The funds have been pretty good at providing a basic level of consumer protection," says Peter G. Gallanis, president of the National Organization of Life & Health Insurance Guaranty Assns.

But the system runs on the assumption that only small insurers are likely to fail, and then only one at a time.

nolu chan  posted on  2011-09-13   1:08:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#115. To: nolu chan (#85)

I do not see the relationship between this and a Ponzi scheme.

The point is that insurance companies, like in a Ponzi Scheme,depend on continued investments from investors to pay out current benefits. If the insurance company fails, the controlling guarantee corporation is no longer required to pay out all the benefits.

NewsJunky  posted on  2011-09-13   18:26:01 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#119. To: NewsJunky (#115)

The point is that insurance companies, like in a Ponzi Scheme,depend on continued investments from investors to pay out current benefits.

They do not depend on an ever-growing base of customers to pay benefits to earlier customers. An insurance company does not go bust due to failure of an impossible rate of increase in customers, but it may go bankrupt.

nolu chan  posted on  2011-09-13   19:12:44 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#123. To: nolu chan (#119) (Edited)

They do not depend on an ever-growing base of customers to pay benefits to earlier customers.

Social Security doesn't depend on ever growing base of customers either. In fact it has had a shrinking base of customer but yet it still has survived. And all that is needed is to tweak revenues and benefit to continue. Its no more like a Ponzi Scheme than an insurance company.

NewsJunky  posted on  2011-09-13   21:20:56 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#128. To: NewsJunky (#123)

Social Security doesn't depend on ever growing base of customers either. In fact it has had a shrinking base of customer but yet it still has survived.

You can't be serious.

nolu chan  posted on  2011-09-13   23:41:33 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#138. To: nolu chan (#128)

So this chart shows you from 1960 and beyond

This chart shows you the same ratio from 1945 onward. So you can tell that the number of investors to the plan has, for the most part, steadily decreased.

NewsJunky  posted on  2011-09-14   18:16:16 ET  (2 images) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#144. To: NewsJunky, jwpegler (#138)

This chart shows you the same ratio from 1945 onward. So you can tell that the number of investors to the plan has, for the most part, steadily decreased.

No, your premise is unrelated to your conclusion. The chart shows a declining RATIO of workers to beneficiaries which I have repeatedly said is the case and the problem.

The RATIO does not express anything in terms of the quantity of participants, investors, or beneficiaries. To retain the RATIO, the system would have had to sign up 40 new workers for each addition to the rolls of beneficiaries.

The number of beneficiaries has risen to 54,032,097.

To maintain a 40:1 ratio you would need to find 2,161,283,880 investors to pay in. That is about 7 times the population of the entire United States.

The number of people paying in has gone UP. The number of people collecting benefits has gone up at a higher proportional rate. Where there one was over 40 people paying in for each person drawing benefits, it appears there are now between 3 and 4 persons paying in for each person drawing benefits out. The baby boomers are retiring, swelling the number of beneficiaries in numbers the system never could sustain. This is the type of thing that happens in a Ponzi-like system.

nolu chan  posted on  2011-09-14   20:01:32 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#148. To: nolu chan, NewsJunky, jwpegler (#144) (Edited)

This chart shows you the same ratio from 1945 onward. So you can tell that the number of investors to the plan has, for the most part, steadily decreased.

That is true up until 1975; since then the ratio has been pretty darn stable, ranging between 3.2 and 3.4. In 2009 the ratio dropped to 3, and was 2.9 in 2010.

www.ssa.gov/history/ratios.html

Because workers generally spend more years (about 50) working than they do in retirement (15-20), the ratio should remain relatively stable as long as the economy creates jobs and population isn't declining.

lucysmom  posted on  2011-09-14   20:20:13 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#155. To: lucysmom (#148)

That is true up until 1975; since then the ratio has been pretty darn stable, ranging between 3.2 and 3.4. In 2009 the ratio dropped to 3, and was 2.9 in 2010.

http://ssa-custhelp.ssa.gov/app/answers/detail/a_id/13/~/average-monthly-social-security-benefit-for-a-retired-worker

The average monthly Social Security benefit for a retired worker was about $1,177 at the beginning of 2011. This amount changes monthly based upon the total amount of all benefits paid and the total number of people receiving benefits.

That does not include the overhead for administration.

At a ratio of 3:1, each worker needs to pay almost $400 per month. When it shrinks to 2:1, that would rise to nearly $600 per month.

As the ratio shrinks, the burden on each worker rises at a much more rapid rate. From 3:1 to 2:1 causes a 50% increase.

The ratio will continue to shrink unless the worker base increases at an impossible rate.

nolu chan  posted on  2011-09-14   20:54:08 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#174. To: Capitalist Eric, NewsJunky, jwpegler, lucysmom, A K A Stone (#155) (Edited)

Social Security Online - Ratio of Covered Workers to Beneficiaries - 1940-2085

- - -

Social Security 2011, Facts and Figures

nolu chan  posted on  2011-09-14   21:18:46 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#177. To: nolu chan (#174)

Your chart is pretty discouraging.

Does it include government workers in those numbers? If it does then wouldn't you say that the actual number is quite lower as they add nothing new to the pie?

A K A Stone  posted on  2011-09-14   21:30:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 177.

#204. To: A K A Stone (#177)

Does it include government workers in those numbers? If it does then wouldn't you say that the actual number is quite lower as they add nothing new to the pie?

Government workers are included. They pay into SS and receive benefits just as non-government workers do.

The charts from SS show there is a real problem. Regardless of what we call it or who we blame, there is a problem that needs fixing.

nolu chan  posted on  2011-09-14 23:28:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#226. To: A K A Stone (#177)

If it does then wouldn't you say that the actual number is quite lower as they add nothing new to the pie?

Correct.

Capitalist Eric  posted on  2011-09-15 12:56:14 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 177.

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