[DHT]Osiris
Lifer
Eh, the principal idea of a Ponzi scheme is that those that come after pay those that are there. The end result is that those that got in first are the winners, and those who get in last/near to last are the losers. With SS, I'm *right now* paying for someone who's retired. I'm not putting money into a 'retirement fund' marked '[DHT]Osiris' SS funds' that won't be touched by someone else's wrinkly hands. It's going into a pot, and being divvied out to those getting SS payments right now. Other than the US Govt saying 'it shall be so', there's no guarantee that this system will still exist when it comes time for me to retire, and in fact, it's looking more and more like it won't exist in 30 years when I am looking at retirement age.It's definitely not like a Ponzi scheme in any way, shape, or form. It's a pay as you go system, which there are zillions of all over the world.
First, Ponzi schemes are frauds because their investors aren't told what's going on, unlike social security. Second, Ponzi schemes are inherently unsustainable because they require an ever increasing number of participants and there's no way around that. Social Security does not depend on an exponentially growing base of people to be sustainable, it just means the taxes and benefits have to be changed over time to comport with demographics.
Has there ever been a point where SS has needed *less* money to sustain? If 'changing taxes and benefits over time' only happens in one direction, and it has to be done to sustain it in an upward direction wrt funding in order to continue supplying the fund for more retirees, how is that not depending on a growing base of people/funding to be sustainable?