Accurate? Check. Directly stated? Check.

Yeah, it's really Paul Krugman.

Borrow, Speculate and Hope
By PAUL KRUGMAN

The National Association of Securities Dealers," The Wall Street Journal reports, "is investigating whether some brokerage houses are inappropriately pushing individuals to borrow large sums on their houses to invest in the stock market." Can we persuade the association to investigate would-be privatizers of Social Security?

For it is now apparent that the Bush administration's privatization proposal will amount to the same thing: borrow trillions, put the money in the stock market and hope.

Privatization would begin by diverting payroll taxes, which pay for current Social Security benefits, into personal investment accounts. The government, already deep in deficit, would have to borrow to make up the shortfall.

This would sharply increase the government's debt. Never mind, privatization advocates say: in the long run, they claim, people would make so much on personal accounts that the government could save money by cutting retirees' benefits. Financial markets won't believe this claim, as I'll explain in a minute, but let's temporarily grant the point.

Even so, if personal investment accounts were invested in Treasury bonds, this whole process would accomplish precisely nothing. The interest workers would receive on their accounts would exactly match the interest the government would have to pay on its additional debt. To compensate for the initial borrowing, the government would have to cut future benefits so much that workers would gain nothing at all.

How, then, can privatizers claim that they could secure the future of Social Security without raising taxes or reducing the incomes of future retirees? By assuming that workers would invest most of their accounts in stocks, that these investments would make a lot of money and that, in effect, the government, not the workers, would reap most of those gains, because as personal accounts grew, the government could cut benefits.

We can argue at length about whether the high stock returns such schemes assume are realistic (they aren't), but let's cut to the chase: in essence, such schemes involve having the government borrow heavily and put the money in the stock market. That's because the government would, in effect, confiscate workers' gains in their personal accounts by cutting those workers' benefits.

Once you realize that privatization really means government borrowing to speculate on stocks, it doesn't sound too responsible, does it? But the details make it considerably worse.

First, financial markets would, correctly, treat the reality of huge deficits today as a much more important indicator of the government's fiscal health than the mere promise that government could save money by cutting benefits in the distant future.

After all, a government bond is a legally binding promise to pay, while a benefits formula that supposedly cuts costs 40 years from now is nothing more than a suggestion to future Congresses. Social Security rules aren't immutable: in the past, Congress has changed things like the retirement age and the tax treatment of benefits. If a privatization plan passed in 2005 called for steep benefit cuts in 2045, what are the odds that those cuts would really happen?

Second, a system of personal accounts, even though it would mainly be an indirect way for the government to speculate in the stock market, would pay huge brokerage fees. Of course, from Wall Street's point of view that's a benefit, not a cost.

There is, by the way, a precedent for Bush-style privatization. One major reason for Argentina's rapid debt buildup in the 1990's was a pension reform involving a switch to individual accounts - a switch that President Carlos Menem, like President Bush, decided to finance with borrowing rather than taxes. So Mr. Bush intends to emulate a plan that helped set the stage for Argentina's economic crisis.

If Mr. Bush were to say in plain English that his plan to solve our fiscal problems is to borrow trillions, put the money into stocks and hope for the best, everyone would denounce that plan as the height of irresponsibility. The fact that this plan has an elaborate disguise, one that would add considerably to its costs, makes it worse.

And maybe the fact that serious financial experts, the sort qualified to be Treasury secretary, understand all this is the reason why John Snow has just been reappointed.

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Posted by Prometheus 6 on December 10, 2004 - 9:20am :: Economics
 
 

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Even so, if personal investment accounts were invested in Treasury bonds, this whole process would accomplish precisely nothing.

Not so.

Originally SS was conceived as a retirement program.

By now it's morphed into a combination of welfare and a retirement program. The question remaining, will it ever convert entirely into a welfare program.

Creating individual accounts, with balances like a 401k makes it politically nearly impossible to convert SS into a pure welfare program. Such an action would be to steal the balance, that money which belongs to the individual. Far harder than saying "only those who need SS will benefit from it" when there is no balance to see. It's not as if we own anything despite having paid in tens of thousands of $$.

We'd like a sense of ownership, please.

It's also not as if the government's status with respect to this money would change (assuming they're not intending to confiscate it). Balancing the budget by counting SS payments is bogus, and should be stopped anyway. Creating accounts would have no economic shock because it wouldn't change the real national debt.

As to whether such accounts should be allowed to trade stocks, that's a whole 'nother question. The Chile solution, which has worked well, allows a limited set of choices, all conservative. You can't invest in individual stocks at all. You can invest in funds which themselves can invest in stocks in a highly controlled, and limited way. The funds compete for investors.

Posted by  dwshelf not logged in (not verified) on December 11, 2004 - 2:10am.

By now it's morphed into a combination of welfare and a retirement program. The question remaining, will it ever convert entirely into a welfare program.

Really? Which part is the welfare program part? All I see is a retirement program.

Posted by  Prometheus 6 on December 11, 2004 - 3:03am.

The benefits currently being paid are well in excess of what was contributed, particularly toward the low end. The problem is that benefits are set by political process rather than by how much money was paid in by the worker. Combine the temptation to reward voters with a program which, as originally conceived, imagined benefits in the $30/month range. Many of today's recipients qualified in that era, and have collected 10's or 100's of times the benefit they paid for.

The system was "reformed", during the '70s and early '80s, making it closer to acutarily correct, and as more retirees end up with more years worked after 1970, the current precise welfare component will shrink, but not be eliminated on the low end. Further, life spans continue to rise; the reduction of the national smoking level is likely to be very costly to the SS system. And there's the inflation wild card. SS recipients are largely protected from inflation, a risk assumed by taxpayers and not the recipients; a risk not accounted for in the funding levels, and thus a welfare component.

While it makes no real sense to give rich retirees welfare, the current or planned levels are not what is the threat to the system. The threat to the system is that as the number of retirees baloons as the baby boomers retire, the government's ability to borrow cheap money may be compromised by overuse. At such a time, the government is going to be looking around for how it can cut spending, and "you don't need it" is likely to seem a convincing argument. At that time, the money paid in by people who prepared for retirement will be confiscated and transferred to people who did not prepare, and SS will have been converted into a welfare program.

We're always going to have a mixture of catastrophy insurance and retirement savings. No one expects their account to hold the entire amount they've paid in. Half would probably be sufficient.

Posted by  dwshelf on December 11, 2004 - 6:33pm.

So it's not a welfare program, but because you feel it might become one in a time frame that renders all predictions to be mere guesswork you'd like to retract the safety net.

Posted by  Prometheus 6 on December 11, 2004 - 8:44pm.

What safety net?

I know some advocate allowing risky investments, and leaving unlucky dumb people to suffer the consequences. That ain't me.

All I hope for is an account with a balance showing my money saved for retirement.

Posted by  dwshelf on December 12, 2004 - 2:15am.

All I hope for is an account with a balance showing my money saved for retirement.

All that takes is a savings account.

Social security is a collective retirement program. It's as fair as an insurance policy...it spread the risk across the pool of participants in exactly the same way.

There are collective issues, you know, just as there are individual issues. If you judge one by the criteria applicable to the other, you guarantee problems…which is exactly what the neo-economists would like.

Posted by  Prometheus 6 on December 12, 2004 - 2:29am.

It's as fair as an insurance policy...it spread the risk across the pool of participants in exactly the same way.

But that's not how it works. That's how it should work, that's pretty much how I ask for it to work, but that's not how it works today.

The way it works today is the government charges as much as it thinks it can get away with, and it offers benefits intended to maximize the chance for re-election of current politicians.

We need a program which collects money, and accounts for it. Some of the benefits involve no decision, e.g. you must buy coverage for premature death. Other benefits you have some degree of control over.

The modern corporate pension plan offers a fine model. It's a "defined contribution" plan, as opposed to the old "defined benefit" program. You can't control the money, but you have a balance. At retirement, you can choose "life annuity", and get a fixed payout for life. Or you can withdraw a minimal amount and save it for later. But it's your money, not the company's. They can't take it back even if they go bankrupt.

Posted by  dwshelf on December 12, 2004 - 4:55pm.

It's as fair as an insurance policy...it spread the risk across the pool of participants in exactly the same way.

But that's not how it works. That's how it should work, that's pretty much how I ask for it to work, but that's not how it works today.

Then you don't want privatization because privatization specifically deaggregates the risk.

Posted by  Prometheus 6 on December 12, 2004 - 5:39pm.

Then you don't want privatization because privatization specifically deaggregates the risk

Sometimes you take what you can get in a government program, because it's better than any plausible alternative.

Given a choice between a privatized program with a balance, and the status quo, I'll take the balance.

I believe the Chile system is near ideal; it's prvatized, but regulated.

Posted by  dwshelf on December 13, 2004 - 6:44am.

Given a choice between a privatized program with a balance, and the status quo, I'll take the balance.

That's not the only choice, though. In theory, anyway. Anytime you add humans to theory you're bound to geta surprise.

Posted by  Prometheus 6 on December 13, 2004 - 11:38am.