This is baffling. Do you understand what my argument was? It was that people justifying cuts based on life expectancy was dumb. If you think I undermined that argument by using the very data they were trying to use I don't know what to say other than...no?
I do but I wasn't arguing that. In fact I bolded your exact statement I took issue with. You said "Life expectancy for lower economic tiers has not changed" I said you were wrong and then provided evidence to that effect. Your response was to cite projections which you say are not accurate. Even if we decide to agree that projections have merit we still need to contend with the health choices that weight on lower income life expectancy - like the expensive habit of smoking as noted earlier - and that controlling for choices does show a rise in life expectancy for lower economic tiers.
And to your comment "It seems like a bad idea to index poverty reduction measures to the life expectancy of the rich." that is clearly not what is being done here since the rich would be at the top of the life expectancy chart and above the noted averages. Therefore having the retirement age raised to half of the average increase in life expectancy is obviously not indexing it to the life expectancy of the rich since it is well below that mark. I do not have time to do the math but I suspect that if we remove 25-33% of the difference in LE gains (the % caused by increased levels of smoking) we will find that a 4 year increase over 100 years is close to the LE increase for the lowest income levels.
Do you think if you borrow $100 from your wife your family has suddenly gotten a $100 asset or has there been no change in your net worth?
Absurd comparison aside there are actually situations where that would change the courts' or IRS' view of your family's assets and could result in a net negative to your wife's net worth.
So you're saying that Congress needs to act now because Congress may not act in the future?
I never said they needed to.
You're making the classic mistake of comparing personal revenues to government revenues. It's hard for people to understand that the two are nothing alike.
You said "Because of that, cutting things now does absolutely nothing to actually affect our ability to pay." which cannot be substantiated as we are not at the point where SS cannot pay its promised benefits. It is entirely possible that other constraints on the budget like medicade\medicare make Congress unwilling\unable to overide the fund deficit for SS or do so to a level better than the current proposal. (Not that I would hold my breath on this proposal passing in its current state) Likewise I cannot say that making changes now will avert this issue - however making changes now makes it far more likely SS stays solvent while avoiding knee jerk changes with unknown or negative consequences that cannot be fully mitigated. It is also not necessary to 'fix' it all in one bill.
The latter was to an earlier point where you said 'we gain literally nothing'. I pointed out an impact - it does not matter where that impact occurs since there were no specified confines in your comment. In fact the use of an absolute specifically includes everything.
To restate my original point - this isn't perfect but its starting out at a much more moderate position that I would have hoped for. I would have expected something far closer to 'privatize social security' given the relative power Republicans currently enjoy.
It all comes down to one very simple fact that once you understand you will see why cutting benefits now to protect the 'trust fund' is silliness: The amount of money the government has to pay retirement benefits, the military, roads, whatever, is the sum total of all tax receipts, plus borrowing. If the government buys its own bonds to put them in a trust fund that doesn't give them more money to spend next year because they are only transacting with themselves. If we cut social security benefits to zero today it would mean nothing as to our capacity to pay them in 2035 and if we doubled them today the same thing would be true.
It baffles me that you make this argument since I have never said anything in regards to protecting the trust fund and specifically mentioned that the overall level isn't of great importance. The level of trust fund reserves doesn't matter to the payouts as long as expenditures doesn't exceed assets. The trust fund only serves as a proxy for overall solvency. The additional assets could be a $1 IOU but as long as it stays at that we have no issues with SS. The desire for a gradual change isn't because the assets have to be protected its so that people have time to adjust to any changes. A drop of 25% or even 10% is not something a lot of retirees can just absorb instantly. It takes years and years of planning to build up personal reserves of that magnitude.
