USANext Stages Swiftboat-Style Attack Ad Against AARP

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DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
0
I think the point of this thread (in case you missed it) is why can't Dubya's policies stand on their
own without resorting to stupid and dirty tricks like running a smear campaign against the AARP?
If the GOP-proposed reforms to SS are so truly great, everyone will be able to recognize that fact.
Resorting to propoganda campaigns and/or ridiculous attack ads against anyone who may not see
the benefits of their particular policies, simply shows their incredible desperation.

And by the way, I'd hardly call the AARP or it's members "liberal." WTF?!?
 

Jhhnn

IN MEMORIAM
Nov 11, 1999
62,365
14,685
136
You misunderstand the current rightwing use of the term "Liberal", Deal Monkey. By "Liberal", they mean anybody not marching to the Bush faction drumbeat. Even centrist elements in the Republican party are "Liberal" by wingnut definition...

"With Us or Against Us" automatically defines all opposition as "Big Guvmint Libruhls" or "Leftists"- Capiche?

Basically, their agitprop has become so successful that they actually believe it themselves. It's a form of intoxication, akin to drunkeness.

This whole bit about the AARP being hypocritical is an example of just how whacked out those on the right fringe really are. The AARP has promoted the traditional three legged stool theory of retirement security for a very long time- basically that seniors shouldn't depend on SS alone, or on any single retirement vehicle, but should have assets in Real Estate, Investments and savings as well. Any yokel who's actually glanced at their literature or website should be able to realize that- well, unless they're sporting the usual ideological filters imposed by devotion to the various uber right cults of personality- you know- the chanting, the marching, the flag waving, the sheer joy of believing, and of attacking an identifiable enemy...
 

AndrewR

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
11,157
0
0
AARP is against anything which threatens the gravy train, but they'll be the first and loudest critics of the government if Social Security starts running out of money. They won't care if SS starts bleeding the rest of the government dry, only that their entitlements keep flowing.

A second term President is the only one who can take on AARP and win. Here's to hoping it happens! :beer:
 

charrison

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
17,033
1
81
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Social security has been paying the benefits, and it will be able to pay them very far into the future.



Just as the stock market has been making returns of 12% annually on average.

But they can't even guarantee 12% return a year from today, much less to 2042.

Well so far we are guaranteed a 25% reduction in benefits and almost zero return on "investment" in 2042 if nothing is done with social security(not counting the increased taxes to get there).

What a guarantee....

You are not guaranteed a 25% reduction in benefits in 2042. Where did you get that from?
25% is reduction from what it would have been if they just let it grow indexed to wages, but it's not a reduction from today's level, and may not even be a reduction relative to inflation if wages grow ahead of inflation. The actual benefit won't be decreased, it will just grow at a slower rate.
Also, if people live longer in 2042, a 25% smaller benefit over a longer lifespan after retirement will pay out the same amount.



the 25% benefit cut is from the cbo/ss office projections.
 

Specop 007

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2005
9,454
0
0
God I wish I could opt out of Social Security and have my portion of SS go into a private investment vehicle of my choosing.
Heres to hoping someday i can opt out of the government hand holding and coodling and be my own man! :beer:

Like that will ever happen :roll:

Yes, completely irrelevent to the thread. :D
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
0
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Social security has been paying the benefits, and it will be able to pay them very far into the future.



Just as the stock market has been making returns of 12% annually on average.

But they can't even guarantee 12% return a year from today, much less to 2042.

Well so far we are guaranteed a 25% reduction in benefits and almost zero return on "investment" in 2042 if nothing is done with social security(not counting the increased taxes to get there).

What a guarantee....

You are not guaranteed a 25% reduction in benefits in 2042. Where did you get that from?
25% is reduction from what it would have been if they just let it grow indexed to wages, but it's not a reduction from today's level, and may not even be a reduction relative to inflation if wages grow ahead of inflation. The actual benefit won't be decreased, it will just grow at a slower rate.
Also, if people live longer in 2042, a 25% smaller benefit over a longer lifespan after retirement will pay out the same amount.



the 25% benefit cut is from the cbo/ss office projections.

But what is it a cut from? It's a cut not from today's levels, and not even from inflation adjusted levels in 2042. It's a cut from wage indexed levels in 2042. Which are expected to outpace inflation by 1-2% per year.
So it's only a "cut" in government speak, which means it will grow to 75% of the level it would have grown by 2042. And what's the reason for the cut? People are living longer. So if they are getting a smaller benefit over a longer period of time, the return won't change over the life expectancy. So there isn't any problem at all. It's just common sense adjustments. You can take smaller benefit over a longer time or a bigger benefit over a smaller time. So adjusting lower the benefit or raising retirement age will fix the system, no need to privatize it. Private accounts won't solve people living longer, they'll still have to spread their investment nest egg over a longer time.
 

JimKiler

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 2002
3,561
206
106
Why is the AARP against it if the plan is voluntary and Bush already said it won't affect them, anyone over 30 i believe.

I am 28 and grew up with schools and news always saying the Social Security will be broke. I think most people under 30 believe this now and therefore we have nothing to lose with Bush's plan since Social Security would be broke with no fix. I was told this for the last 20 years and only now we hear in the news this may not be the case.
 

JimKiler

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 2002
3,561
206
106
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
The swift boat school of gonzo political attack campaigns was so successful, the GOP has decided to use it again. Only this time the AARP is the target and Social Security (oh GOD! The crisis!) is the topic. Old people, hang on to your depends, this is gonna be a tough fight! :D

If you are going to claim Swiftboat veterans are pawns of the GOP I will have to claim the Moveonorg and rock the vote being pawns of Democrats.

Of course if you have proof they are pawns we will consider it as fact.
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
Yet you have no problem with the government getting into the business of pushing stocks and bonds in retirement accounts

They already do, every heard of the federal thrift program?!?!?!?!?!?

Lowest avg for any of the 5 funds was 5.45% and the highest was a return of 12%.

Past returns are not a guarantee of future returns. Why is that so hard to understand?

This is a strawman argument a 12 year old comes up with. It is the only thing you can grasp onto and the reality of the situation is Greenspan thinks they are a viable solution to the long term SS problem, they provide a higher standard of living for people, and they generally will equal 8-10% return vs the inflation rate you get with SS.

Using your head there is no way you can tell us private accounts wont come out ahead of SS. The only way is if the financial markets collapse. If that happens then this govt most likely ceased to exist and you wont get SS either way.

I dont understand why it is so hard for you and BBond to understand this. It is like you just dont want to believe people will be better off if they can invest part of their SS into a fund that will generate a higher return. And above all it will be theres, not the govts to use like the current system.

Social security has been paying the benefits, and it will be able to pay them very far into the future.

Have you ever looked at the payments the govt will have to come up with after 2018? Do you think we will be able to generate a surplus of a few hundred billion each year through the 2020s, half a trillion each year through the 2030s, and over 1 trilliona year in the 2040s???

When will it sink into your head that this country is running into a financial nightmare that it simply cant borrow its way out of. The Trustee report is estimating by 2080 we will be running a program for SS + Medicare that will have a 20 trillion a year shortfall. You guys complain about 400 billion. Try coming up with that kind of cash.

Also, if people live longer in 2042, a 25% smaller benefit over a longer lifespan after retirement will pay out the same amount

Another strawman argument. Expecting somebody to live 25% longer to get the same benefit is a foolish stance. Also you complain this privativzation will put seniors into poverty. Right now seniors on avg earn 955 bucks a month from SS benefits. That is 11,500 a year. Lop off 25% and tell us where they sit. Compare that to the poverty line in this country.

You are creating a problem you are complaining about. On top of that you will bankrupt the rest of the nation doing it.

But what is it a cut from?

A reduction in benefits. Lets say for example the payments will be 2755 if you consider an avg inflation rate of 3% based on the avg monthly payment today of 955.

Lop off 25% of that and it will be 2066 a month. So what benefit do people get by putting their money into the current SS system?

 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
0
Originally posted by: Genx87
Yet you have no problem with the government getting into the business of pushing stocks and bonds in retirement accounts

They already do, every heard of the federal thrift program?!?!?!?!?!?

Lowest avg for any of the 5 funds was 5.45% and the highest was a return of 12%.

Past returns are not a guarantee of future returns. Why is that so hard to understand?

This is a strawman argument a 12 year old comes up with. It is the only thing you can grasp onto and the reality of the situation is Greenspan thinks they are a viable solution to the long term SS problem, they provide a higher standard of living for people, and they generally will equal 8-10% return vs the inflation rate you get with SS.

Using your head there is no way you can tell us private accounts wont come out ahead of SS. The only way is if the financial markets collapse. If that happens then this govt most likely ceased to exist and you wont get SS either way.

I dont understand why it is so hard for you and BBond to understand this. It is like you just dont want to believe people will be better off if they can invest part of their SS into a fund that will generate a higher return. And above all it will be theres, not the govts to use like the current system.

Social security has been paying the benefits, and it will be able to pay them very far into the future.

Have you ever looked at the payments the govt will have to come up with after 2018? Do you think we will be able to generate a surplus of a few hundred billion each year through the 2020s, half a trillion each year through the 2030s, and over 1 trilliona year in the 2040s???

When will it sink into your head that this country is running into a financial nightmare that it simply cant borrow its way out of. The Trustee report is estimating by 2080 we will be running a program for SS + Medicare that will have a 20 trillion a year shortfall. You guys complain about 400 billion. Try coming up with that kind of cash.

Also, if people live longer in 2042, a 25% smaller benefit over a longer lifespan after retirement will pay out the same amount

Another strawman argument. Expecting somebody to live 25% longer to get the same benefit is a foolish stance. Also you complain this privativzation will put seniors into poverty. Right now seniors on avg earn 955 bucks a month from SS benefits. That is 11,500 a year. Lop off 25% and tell us where they sit. Compare that to the poverty line in this country.

You are creating a problem you are complaining about. On top of that you will bankrupt the rest of the nation doing it.

But what is it a cut from?

A reduction in benefits. Lets say for example the payments will be 2755 if you consider an avg inflation rate of 3% based on the avg monthly payment today of 955.

Lop off 25% of that and it will be 2066 a month. So what benefit do people get by putting their money into the current SS system?

First of all, SS is indexed to wages, which had been growing 1-2% ahead of inflation. So if you lop off 25% in 2042, you may still be ahead of inflation due to compounding interest of that 1-2%.
Secondly, if you get a monthly benefit "cut" but live more months past retirement age, your return may not change or even increase. It's basic math.
SS invests its money in US government bonds. They may not be the highest return investments, but something that is there to make sure you have basic necessities during retirement should be in low risk investments, like government bonds, not in google stock. And yes, it's going to be hard for the federal government to pay back it's bonds. They should have thought about it when they borrowed the money, and maybe now while they are still borrowing even more. SS is not the one that's been running the deficits. It's the one that has been lending money for other government programs that have been running deficits due to taxcuts and spending. You are not advocating that the federal government default on its debts, are you?
 

MonkeyK

Golden Member
May 27, 2001
1,396
8
81
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: MonkeyK
Originally posted by: DZip
The AARP is misleading the uninformed about individual investment accounts. I wish I could have invested some of my social security taxes in a private account 30 years ago. In the past 30 years my private investments (IRA's and 401k) have averaged 8.7% growth per year. The same amount in a secure savings account would be considerably less. Another misleading point the AARP makes is private investment accounts are mandatory, they would be voluntary and you can make a choice. The AARP is using scare tactics on its gullible members.

Another misleading point that you make is comparing social security to a IRA. Social security includes a disability benefit, which makes it much more comperable to an insurance product than an IRA.


The disability benefit is taxed seperatly from the retirement portion.

What do you mean by this?

 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
First of all, SS is indexed to wages, which had been growing 1-2% ahead of inflation.
So if you lop off 25% in 2042, you may still be ahead of inflation due to compounding interest of that 1-2%.

Still a strawman even if this is true. They will reduce 2042 benefits by 20%.


Secondly, if you get a monthly benefit "cut" but live more months past retirement age, your return may not change or even increase. It's basic math.

You expect us to live to an avg age of 100 years by 2042????

SS invests its money in US government bonds. They may not be the highest return investments, but something that is there to make sure you have basic necessities during retirement should be in low risk investments, like government bonds, not in google stock.

They have several funds to choose from in the thrift program. None of which has had a negative return on investment over the past 10 years.

And yes, it's going to be hard for the federal government to pay back it's bonds. They should have thought about it when they borrowed the money, and maybe now while they are still borrowing even more.

Try impossible

SS is not the one that's been running the deficits. It's the one that has been lending money for other government programs that have been running deficits due to taxcuts and spending. You are not advocating that the federal government default on its debts, are you?

That is fine to whine about but the reality is it will cost a lot of money over the next 80 years. The reality is they need to iron out a fix for this or this country will collapse.

 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
0
It's not a strawman. The original 2042 figure that is going to be cut is a strawman. It's a projection.
You don't have to live to 100 in 2042. With retirement age going to 67, if your life expectancy goes from 77 to 80, you will live 25% longer past retirement and will get same return even if your monthly benefit is cut 25% from some projection.
And if it's impossible for federal government to pay back its loans, why does it still have AAA credit rating. It should be junk bond :)
And the fix is simple. Cut monthly benefit or increase retirement age after 2042. Privatization does not fix any problems, it just creates more of them.
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
It's not a strawman. The original 2042 figure that is going to be cut is a strawman. It's a projection.

You think it will be better?!?!?!? Since when have they ever turned out better than expected?

You don't have to live to 100 in 2042. With retirement age going to 67, if your life expectancy goes from 77 to 80, you will live 25% longer past retirement and will get same return even if your monthly benefit is cut 25% from some projection.


That is still a strawmen. They could cut it by 50% and live to 90. Whoopie do. Why dont they do the same and reduce my SS tax by 25%?

And if it's impossible for federal government to pay back its loans, why does it still have AAA credit rating. It should be junk bond

Because it is the govt and my point wasnt that they couldnt do it. But that it is an impossible idea to think they will be able to come up with trillions a year to pay for this thing without detroying the avg american doing it.

And the fix is simple. Cut monthly benefit or increase retirement age after 2042. Privatization does not fix any problems, it just creates more of them.

Really, then why does Greenspan not agree with your "simple" fix?

Demographics dont fite this plan well and you forget in 2018 the govt has to come up with money to pay itself back. It will start off slow, a few billion here and there then by 2030 it will approach the half a trillion mark.

Anything after 2040 and it is a disaster.

 

dainthomas

Lifer
Dec 7, 2004
14,936
3,915
136
Originally posted by: Genx87
Anything after 2040 and it is a disaster.

Perhaps if the feds stopped stealing money from the fund to pay for unprovoked wars this wouldn't be a problem. Has bushie suggested this as part of his solution?

 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
Perhaps if the feds stopped stealing money from the fund to pay for unprovoked wars this wouldn't be a problem. Has bushie suggested this as part of his solution?

Is that why Clinton addressed this issue in 1998?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?

Stick to the facts please. This war on terrorism wont affect the long term solvency issues of SS and Medicare.

 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
0
Originally posted by: Genx87
It's not a strawman. The original 2042 figure that is going to be cut is a strawman. It's a projection.

You think it will be better?!?!?!? Since when have they ever turned out better than expected?

>>> No, it's overinflated. A 25% cut from some overinflated figure is not a problem in my mind. That figure is a strawman, as is that 25% cut from that strawman.
You don't have to live to 100 in 2042. With retirement age going to 67, if your life expectancy goes from 77 to 80, you will live 25% longer past retirement and will get same return even if your monthly benefit is cut 25% from some projection.


That is still a strawmen. They could cut it by 50% and live to 90. Whoopie do. Why dont they do the same and reduce my SS tax by 25%?

>>> Huh? How is that a strawman. It's common sense. The more time you spread over your money, the less money per unit time there is. Private accounts aren't going to change that. If you have more time to spread your private account over, you are going to have less money per month. It's something a 2 year old should know.

And if it's impossible for federal government to pay back its loans, why does it still have AAA credit rating. It should be junk bond

Because it is the govt and my point wasnt that they couldnt do it. But that it is an impossible idea to think they will be able to come up with trillions a year to pay for this thing without detroying the avg american doing it.

>>> Well, that means the government will have to default on its bonds. More financially astute minds at Moody's and S&P have the same if not more data than you have, and they are keeping their highest ratings for US federal government bonds, meaning they have almost 100% confidence in the government's ability to repay them. Do you know something they don't?

And the fix is simple. Cut monthly benefit or increase retirement age after 2042. Privatization does not fix any problems, it just creates more of them.

Really, then why does Greenspan not agree with your "simple" fix?
>>> Stop worshipping Greenspan. Greenspan also let the economy overheat in the 90's, and then overcorrected.

Demographics dont fite this plan well and you forget in 2018 the govt has to come up with money to pay itself back. It will start off slow, a few billion here and there then by 2030 it will approach the half a trillion mark.

>>> Demographics don't fit the privatized plan well either. People living longer will have to spread their private accounts thinner over a longer period of time. Same as SS. And someone will have to buy the stocks in order for seniors to take money out of their retirements. It's a pay as you go system, just like SS. If baby boomers are all selling their stocks to retire on, and there are fewer young people buying stocks due to demographics, the value of those stocks will go down.

Anything after 2040 and it is a disaster.

>>> And the way out of that disaster is to prepare for it by stopping borrowing now, and paying off loans by running surpluses now, not borrowing like drunken sailors. Any system you pick, the workers and investors are going to have to pay for the retirement of older people, either by buying their stocks or by paying into SS, or through other taxes. Privatization won't fix anything at all.
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
>>> Huh? How is that a strawman. It's common sense. The more time you spread over your money, the less money per unit time there is. Private accounts aren't going to change that. If you have more time to spread your private account over, you are going to have less money per month. It's something a 2 year old should know.

So why dont they lower payments by 99% and string it out over 50 years?!?!?!?!?
That is why it is a strawman. You lower the payment of people and expect them to live longer to make up for it. And private accounts will change that because

A. It is your account, the govt cant touch it
B. You will get a higher return and thus a higher payment per month.

Have you ever looked at a compounding calculation?

Take for instance somebody who makes 50,000 a year. For the sake of simplicity I am going to assume they never get a pay raise over the next 40 years. If they are allowed to put 4% of their income into a private account and retire in 2045.

With a rate of 8% return and an annual contribution of 2000. They can live for 20 years after retirement with an annual income of 53,000 a year.

Over the same timespan with the current system that person will have contributed more(6.5% or 3250) a year and will have an income of an estimated 24-28,000 a year after the benefit cut.

Even if you extend the lifespan of the retiree out to 30 years their annual income will only drop to 47,000 a year.

>>> Well, that means the government will have to default on its bonds. More financially astute minds at Moody's and S&P have the same if not more data than you have, and they are keeping their highest ratings for US federal government bonds, meaning they have almost 100% confidence in the government's ability to repay them. Do you know something they don't?

What are the length of the bonds they are selling? 10,20,30 year bonds? When doe the shat hit the fan again?!?!?!?

Ask Greenspan why he feels the current system is not suited well for an aging demographic and why he feels private accounts are a long term solution and fix for the SS system.

>>> Stop worshipping Greenspan. Greenspan also let the economy overheat in the 90's, and then overcorrected.

He brough interest rates up when he had to. The dotcom boom broke the rules of finacials.
He did what he could. Certainly has more credibility than you or I.

>>> Demographics don't fit the privatized plan well either. People living longer will have to spread their private accounts thinner over a longer period of time. Same as SS. And someone will have to buy the stocks in order for seniors to take money out of their retirements. It's a pay as you go system, just like SS. If baby boomers are all selling their stocks to retire on, and there are fewer young people buying stocks due to demographics, the value of those stocks will go down.

See above, the current system just doesnt compete.


>>> And the way out of that disaster is to prepare for it by stopping borrowing now, and paying off loans by running surpluses now, not borrowing like drunken sailors. Any system you pick, the workers and investors are going to have to pay for the retirement of older people, either by buying their stocks or by paying into SS, or through other taxes. Privatization won't fix anything at all.

Private accounts if done right will be solvent and untouchable by the govt. Each person will have their own account from which to draw upon. When it is time to retire they will be allowed to draw from that fund. Their fund, not a general fund that isnt funded correctly and hasnt been raped by congress. Above all it wont be funded by tax payers either to the tune of trillions.

 

MonkeyK

Golden Member
May 27, 2001
1,396
8
81
Originally posted by: MonkeyK
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: MonkeyK
Originally posted by: DZip
The AARP is misleading the uninformed about individual investment accounts. I wish I could have invested some of my social security taxes in a private account 30 years ago. In the past 30 years my private investments (IRA's and 401k) have averaged 8.7% growth per year. The same amount in a secure savings account would be considerably less. Another misleading point the AARP makes is private investment accounts are mandatory, they would be voluntary and you can make a choice. The AARP is using scare tactics on its gullible members.

Another misleading point that you make is comparing social security to a IRA. Social security includes a disability benefit, which makes it much more comperable to an insurance product than an IRA.





The disability benefit is taxed seperatly from the retirement portion.

What do you mean by this?


charrison,
I think you are confusing social security with SSI. Here is a link describing how SS is more than a retirement account: http://www.pueblo.gsa.gov/cic_text/fed_prog/socsecbf/socsecbf.html
it also describes the difference between SS and SSI.
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
0
Originally posted by: Genx87
>>> Huh? How is that a strawman. It's common sense. The more time you spread over your money, the less money per unit time there is. Private accounts aren't going to change that. If you have more time to spread your private account over, you are going to have less money per month. It's something a 2 year old should know.

So why dont they lower payments by 99% and string it out over 50 years?!?!?!?!?
That is why it is a strawman. You lower the payment of people and expect them to live longer to make up for it. And private accounts will change that because

>>>> Still not a strawman. You don't adjust life expectancy based on the benefit. You adjust the benefit based on life expectancy.

A. It is your account, the govt cant touch it
B. You will get a higher return and thus a higher payment per month.

>>>> You may or may not get a higher return. To get a higher return you need to invest in more risky securities, which means there is a higher chance you will lose money.

Have you ever looked at a compounding calculation?

Take for instance somebody who makes 50,000 a year. For the sake of simplicity I am going to assume they never get a pay raise over the next 40 years. If they are allowed to put 4% of their income into a private account and retire in 2045.

With a rate of 8% return and an annual contribution of 2000. They can live for 20 years after retirement with an annual income of 53,000 a year.

>>>> and who is stopping them from putting 4% of their account away now? Then they will have 53K/year in addition to their social security. Also, 8%annual return is a strawman, and is by no means a safe assumption. If it was, banks would be paying 7% interest and investing the money to keep the extra 1% return.

Over the same timespan with the current system that person will have contributed more(6.5% or 3250) a year and will have an income of an estimated 24-28,000 a year after the benefit cut.
>>>> Another strawman. You don't know what the benefit will be after the cut.

Even if you extend the lifespan of the retiree out to 30 years their annual income will only drop to 47,000 a year.
>>>> If all your optimistic assumptions fan out. And what if they don't? We are going to build a social safety net on the assumption of 8% stock market return while the economy is growing at 3%?

>>> Well, that means the government will have to default on its bonds. More financially astute minds at Moody's and S&P have the same if not more data than you have, and they are keeping their highest ratings for US federal government bonds, meaning they have almost 100% confidence in the government's ability to repay them. Do you know something they don't?

What are the length of the bonds they are selling? 10,20,30 year bonds? When doe the shat hit the fan again?!?!?!?
Ask Greenspan why he feels the current system is not suited well for an aging demographic and why he feels private accounts are a long term solution and fix for the SS system.

>>>> Well, you claim we are going to start having to pay half a trillion dollars in bonds per year back within 30 year time frame. I don't remember government's long term credit rating being cut, do you?

>>> Stop worshipping Greenspan. Greenspan also let the economy overheat in the 90's, and then overcorrected.

He brough interest rates up when he had to. The dotcom boom broke the rules of finacials.
He did what he could. Certainly has more credibility than you or I.

>>>> OK, you can keep worshipping him all you want. But keep in mind that he has been against deficit spending, as well, so if you take his advice on SS, you need to also take his advice on deficits, which the GOP is running like crazy.

>>> Demographics don't fit the privatized plan well either. People living longer will have to spread their private accounts thinner over a longer period of time. Same as SS. And someone will have to buy the stocks in order for seniors to take money out of their retirements. It's a pay as you go system, just like SS. If baby boomers are all selling their stocks to retire on, and there are fewer young people buying stocks due to demographics, the value of those stocks will go down.

See above, the current system just doesnt compete.
>>>> And neither does your system. Where are these 8% returns going to come from when baby boomers are selling stocks to pay for retirement, and there are fewer younger workers buying them?

>>> And the way out of that disaster is to prepare for it by stopping borrowing now, and paying off loans by running surpluses now, not borrowing like drunken sailors. Any system you pick, the workers and investors are going to have to pay for the retirement of older people, either by buying their stocks or by paying into SS, or through other taxes. Privatization won't fix anything at all.

Private accounts if done right will be solvent and untouchable by the govt. Each person will have their own account from which to draw upon. When it is time to retire they will be allowed to draw from that fund. Their fund, not a general fund that isnt funded correctly and hasnt been raped by congress. Above all it wont be funded by tax payers either to the tune of trillions.

>>>> Instead, the taxpayers will be funding a backup welfare system for seniors who didn't make enough in the private accounts to live on. They will only be able to draw from the fund what the market wants to pay them at that particular time for their investments, and with baby boomers all selling at the same time to pay for retirement, it won't be much. Major improvement :roll:
There is nothing stopping you from opening a tax beneficial private IRA or 401k account now. And I think in combination with Social Security, private accounts are a good idea. I just don't want to put all the eggs into the market basket.
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
>>>> Still not a strawman. You don't adjust life expectancy based on the benefit. You adjust the benefit based on life expectancy.

Wish you would learn how to quote. Your way of conversing is annoying.

Back to conversation. They arent basing the benefit on the life expectency but on the ability to pay.

>>>> You may or may not get a higher return. To get a higher return you need to invest in more risky securities, which means there is a higher chance you will lose money.

Even if you dont get a higher return and just break even with SS. You will at least take the burden off the tax payers. History however is not on your side. And the federal thrift program has said otherwise. Expect about a 6-8% rate of return or more depending on the funds involved.

>>>> and who is stopping them from putting 4% of their account away now? Then they will have 53K/year in addition to their social security. Also, 8%annual return is a strawman, and is by no means a safe assumption. If it was, banks would be paying 7% interest and investing the money to keep the extra 1% return.

huh? You are completely missing the point here. The point is

A. Instead of being raped by SS your money will be yours to keep and will get a higher rate of return
B. Taxpayers arent footing the bill for your retirement fund.
C. Do we need to get into your lack of understanding of how banks make money again?

>>>> Another strawman. You don't know what the benefit will be after the cut.

Take the current benefit avg(955), compound it out to 40 years at 3%. Cut it by 20% which is what the Trustee report said will happen in 2042 and get the monthly total. From there multiply it by 12 months a year. I was off a bit, it is 2500 a month if they continue to up the benefits at the rate of inflation. 30,000 a year is what you will get from SS.

>>>> If all your optimistic assumptions fan out. And what if they don't? We are going to build a social safety net on the assumption of 8% stock market return while the economy is growing at 3%?

Even if it breaks even at 3%. The benefit is it wont be on the taxpayers to pay for the system anymore. None of the federal thrift programs have lost wealth over the long term. The way I see it, the financial markets will collapse before this program craps. If the financial markets crap then the govt did also.

>>>> Well, you claim we are going to start having to pay half a trillion dollars in bonds per year back within 30 year time frame. I don't remember government's long term credit rating being cut, do you?

Does it really matter? Go read the trustee report if you dont believe me. Tell us where you think the govt will come up with a half trillion a year starting in ~2030 to pay for this.

>>>> OK, you can keep worshipping him all you want. But keep in mind that he has been against deficit spending, as well, so if you take his advice on SS, you need to also take his advice on deficits, which the GOP is running like crazy.

/yawn

>>>> And neither does your system. Where are these 8% returns going to come from when baby boomers are selling stocks to pay for retirement, and there are fewer younger workers buying them?

You are assuming baby boomers will sell off 100% of their wealth. Ill stick to my guns and look at the historical perspective of this.

>>>> Instead, the taxpayers will be funding a backup welfare system for seniors who didn't make enough in the private accounts to live on. They will only be able to draw from the fund what the market wants to pay them at that particular time for their investments, and with baby boomers all selling at the same time to pay for retirement, it won't be much. Major improvement
There is nothing stopping you from opening a tax beneficial private IRA or 401k account now. And I think in combination with Social Security, private accounts are a good idea. I just don't want to put all the eggs into the market basket.

Here is a news flash for you. SS doesnt pay out enough to live on anyways and it wont in 2042 when they cut it by 20%. The major difference you fail to want to realize is while 4% wont create you a mountain of money. It will at least provide a better cash flow when past retirement age and above all not make the taxpayers responsible for your retirement.

Since you feel having the taxpayers pay for this. How do you propose they come up with the trillions a year in 35 years?!?!?!?!?

 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
0
Originally posted by: JimKiler
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
The swift boat school of gonzo political attack campaigns was so successful, the GOP has decided to use it again. Only this time the AARP is the target and Social Security (oh GOD! The crisis!) is the topic. Old people, hang on to your depends, this is gonna be a tough fight! :D

If you are going to claim Swiftboat veterans are pawns of the GOP I will have to claim the Moveonorg and rock the vote being pawns of Democrats.

Of course if you have proof they are pawns we will consider it as fact.
They're not?!? :confused:
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
0
Originally posted by: Genx87
>>>> Still not a strawman. You don't adjust life expectancy based on the benefit. You adjust the benefit based on life expectancy.

Wish you would learn how to quote. Your way of conversing is annoying.

Back to conversation. They arent basing the benefit on the life expectency but on the ability to pay.

>>>>> And that has nothing to do with life expectancy? Their ability to pay depends on number of seniors in the system, which depends on the life expectancy past retirement age

>>>> You may or may not get a higher return. To get a higher return you need to invest in more risky securities, which means there is a higher chance you will lose money.

Even if you dont get a higher return and just break even with SS. You will at least take the burden off the tax payers. History however is not on your side. And the federal thrift program has said otherwise. Expect about a 6-8% rate of return or more depending on the funds involved.

>>>>> Wow, you can forsee the future. You should be a stock market analyst. How is stock market going to provide 6-8% return long term with economy growing at 3%?

>>>> and who is stopping them from putting 4% of their account away now? Then they will have 53K/year in addition to their social security. Also, 8%annual return is a strawman, and is by no means a safe assumption. If it was, banks would be paying 7% interest and investing the money to keep the extra 1% return.

huh? You are completely missing the point here. The point is

A. Instead of being raped by SS your money will be yours to keep and will get a higher rate of return
B. Taxpayers arent footing the bill for your retirement fund.
C. Do we need to get into your lack of understanding of how banks make money again?

>>>>> Taxpayers will foot a larger bill, because they will have to pay welfare to those who manage to lose their retirement in the market. So instead of a system that people contribute to to get benefits, you will have a wealth redistribution welfare scheme, where people don't contribute.

>>>> Another strawman. You don't know what the benefit will be after the cut.

Take the current benefit avg(955), compound it out to 40 years at 3%. Cut it by 20% which is what the Trustee report said will happen in 2042 and get the monthly total. From there multiply it by 12 months a year. I was off a bit, it is 2500 a month if they continue to up the benefits at the rate of inflation. 30,000 a year is what you will get from SS.

>>>>> The number that will be cut is not the inflation adjusted number, it's the wage indexed number, which has been growing at faster than inflation. So cutting it by 20% may just get it to inflation adjusted number. One of the ideas that has been brought up is indexing SS to inflation instead of wages.

>>>> If all your optimistic assumptions fan out. And what if they don't? We are going to build a social safety net on the assumption of 8% stock market return while the economy is growing at 3%?

Even if it breaks even at 3%. The benefit is it wont be on the taxpayers to pay for the system anymore. None of the federal thrift programs have lost wealth over the long term. The way I see it, the financial markets will collapse before this program craps. If the financial markets crap then the govt did also.

>>>>> That's the way you see it. It's not necessarily correct. Actually it will shift the burden from SS taxpayers to Income taxpayers who will have to take care of those who lose their retirements in private accounts.

>>>> Well, you claim we are going to start having to pay half a trillion dollars in bonds per year back within 30 year time frame. I don't remember government's long term credit rating being cut, do you?

Does it really matter? Go read the trustee report if you dont believe me. Tell us where you think the govt will come up with a half trillion a year starting in ~2030 to pay for this.

>>>>> Well, obviously S&P and Moody's have full confidence in the govt ability to pay its bondholders in the long term, or they would not maintain the highest possible credit rating on US govt. They have read the same info you and I did.

>>>> OK, you can keep worshipping him all you want. But keep in mind that he has been against deficit spending, as well, so if you take his advice on SS, you need to also take his advice on deficits, which the GOP is running like crazy.

/yawn

>>>> And neither does your system. Where are these 8% returns going to come from when baby boomers are selling stocks to pay for retirement, and there are fewer younger workers buying them?

You are assuming baby boomers will sell off 100% of their wealth. Ill stick to my guns and look at the historical perspective of this.

>>>>> If they need money to live on, they'll have no choice but to sell off their wealth. Some may die before they exhaust their accounts, but others will exhaust their accounts before they die and will be a burden on the federal government's welfare programs.

>>>> Instead, the taxpayers will be funding a backup welfare system for seniors who didn't make enough in the private accounts to live on. They will only be able to draw from the fund what the market wants to pay them at that particular time for their investments, and with baby boomers all selling at the same time to pay for retirement, it won't be much. Major improvement
There is nothing stopping you from opening a tax beneficial private IRA or 401k account now. And I think in combination with Social Security, private accounts are a good idea. I just don't want to put all the eggs into the market basket.

Here is a news flash for you. SS doesnt pay out enough to live on anyways and it wont in 2042 when they cut it by 20%. The major difference you fail to want to realize is while 4% wont create you a mountain of money. It will at least provide a better cash flow when past retirement age and above all not make the taxpayers responsible for your retirement.

>>>>> Since when is $30000/year/person (your number) not enough to live on? You can live like a king on that kind of money if you have the house paid off and kids grown up. And even if you have to pay rent, you can live very comfortably in many areas. There are people supporting whole families on that kind of income, much less one person.

Since you feel having the taxpayers pay for this. How do you propose they come up with the trillions a year in 35 years?!?!?!?!?

The same place they would find trillions a year to put into stock market in 35 years to buy stocks sold by retirees from their private SS accounts.
 

Mursilis

Diamond Member
Mar 11, 2001
7,756
11
81
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Social security has been paying the benefits, and it will be able to pay them very far into the future.



Just as the stock market has been making returns of 12% annually on average.

But they can't even guarantee 12% return a year from today, much less to 2042.

But you can't guarantee anything, because money paid into SS is legally a tax, and Congress only returns anything to you at their own discretion. It could be $10K a month, or it could be jack, and there's not a darn thing you can do about it, legally. It's not like a private mutual fund can tell you "Sure, you paid $100K into our fund over your working lifetime, but we blew most of it on beer and cheap women, so here's a hundred bucks, and that's all you're going to get." Fidelity can't legally do that, but the Social Security Administration sure can, and since it's my money to start with (unless you're the type of liberal who doesn't believe any dollars are private), I'd rather take my chances with Fidelity.
I thought you libs were pro-choice? Why can't I opt out of the gov't Ponzi scheme? I guess people who want to make their own investment decisions are dangerous or something; better to have the gov't in charge of it all.
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
0
Originally posted by: Mursilis
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Social security has been paying the benefits, and it will be able to pay them very far into the future.



Just as the stock market has been making returns of 12% annually on average.

But they can't even guarantee 12% return a year from today, much less to 2042.

But you can't guarantee anything, because money paid into SS is legally a tax, and Congress only returns anything to you at their own discretion. It could be $10K a month, or it could be jack, and there's not a darn thing you can do about it, legally. It's not like a private mutual fund can tell you "Sure, you paid $100K into our fund over your working lifetime, but we blew most of it on beer and cheap women, so here's a hundred bucks, and that's all you're going to get." Fidelity can't legally do that, but the Social Security Administration sure can, and since it's my money to start with (unless you're the type of liberal who doesn't believe any dollars are private), I'd rather take my chances with Fidelity.
I thought you libs were pro-choice? Why can't I opt out of the gov't Ponzi scheme? I guess people who want to make their own investment decisions are dangerous or something; better to have the gov't in charge of it all.

Stock market is also a Ponzi scheme. And yes, Americans cannot make their own investment decisions. As evidenced by the doc com bubble. I really don't think people who valued companies with huge losses and tiny revenues at many billions of dollars can be trusted to save for their retirement, because they will only end up on government welfare when their investments don't pan out.