USING SOCIAL SECURITY TO FIX THE ECONOMY
65ECONOMIC FIX NEEDS SOCIAL SECURITY
ALBUQUERQUE, NM (4 April 2009)--The debates are going 'round and 'round on "fixing the economy." Perhaps we should focus upon entirely new ideas and models instead of repairing financial structures and infrastructures that have failed the industrialized world miserably in the past decade or two. So, when prodded by colleagues I keep envisioning an economic rebound which actually accrues to the benefit of American taxpayers. It might be the only real chance to recoup recent retirement losses.
How about
this?:
1. The biggest hit to average Americans has been loss of
investments,
retirement accounts, home equity values, and prospects for a
more dismal retirement.
2. The Social
Security Trust is currently only allowed to invest in US
Treasury Bonds,
Bills, and Notes. period.
3. The Social
Security Trust has long been bankrupt and is only a
bookkeeping entry used
to shift funds from general accounting to appear solvent. I
received a Soc
Sec letter recently telling me the system goes bankrupt in 2040
without
changes.
4. US
taxpayers now essentially own the world's largest insurance company,
all of
the investment banking industry, large chunks of commercial banking and
mortgages, paying agents for mortgages and consumer credit, and automobiles.
We are told that there actually will be repayments, and perhaps even
profits
some day.
Thus
5. If and
when, if ever, whenever, returns and repayments start trickling in
to the
US Treasury (a few repayments have started), Congress must designate
that
100 per cent of these funds be escrowed in a real Social Security account
to
augment future payments and ease the impact of taxpayers'
losses.
Most
financial professionals have long ago said that self-directed (not the
same
as "privatized") social security fund using equities (stocks) and
corporate
bonds--managed the same way pensions are managed for college professors,
congressmen, IBM employees etc--is essential to our retirement
survival.
Chile and Spain
used US-designed models for these successful transitions. But the political
reality is that scare tactics and the most recent incarnation of 1929
thinking will never allow this to happen in the USA. My
idea to re-fund the Trust with any recovered assets would at least
help.
-30-
PrintShare it! — Rate it: up down flag this hub
Comments
thanks for being my loyal reader....we need to have the same retirement plan that members of congress have...one that is diversified in stocks and bonds over the long term
But SS is too politicalized to have the suggested changes implemented
I strongly disagree with your proposal to use repayment of the bailout funds exclusively for the Social Security program, which is not any more bankrupt than the federal government. The severity of the current downtown was caused by the government's failure to oversee and property regulate the banks, mortgage companies, hedge funds and other businesses as well as pure greed on the part of many corporations and their executives. It's insanity to commit billions, maybe trillions, of dollars to a future filled with unknowns. The task now is to stabilize our economic system. When that is accomplished, Social Security will be OK. Simple solutions rarely solve complex problems.
thanks for the thoughtful response...my thought was given a prioritized repayment actually designated to targeted accounts we might avoid some of the tragedies as poutlined on CBS 60 mnutes last night...thanks for commenting
ms





ESAHS says:
9 months ago
"Great hub that focus on that old question, "Do we steal from the disabled to give to the working and balance the FISCAL BUDGET ?"
"Super Hub underlining Social Security Lows!"
"Two thumbs up!"
CEO E.S.A.H.S. Association