
Gore’s Social Security Plan Doesn’t Add Up . . .
by Sylvester J. Schieber
November 4, 2000
In the last presidential debate, Al Gore told us that George W. Bush intends
to take $1 trillion out of the Social Security trust fund and put it into young
workers’ individual accounts while also using that same $1 trillion to pay benefits
to current beneficiaries. Mr. Gore implies that Mr. Bush’s plan uses smoke-and-mirrors
funding, because it spends the same $1 trillion twice.
Meantime, Mr. Gore suggests that he has invented a way to guarantee Social
Security benefits without incurring the costs of a Bush plan. Mr. Gore would
do this by issuing the Social Security trust funds more than $1 trillion in
new bonds, which he claims will extend the life of Social Security to at least
2054.
The source of these bonds is not revenue from new taxes or other financing
mechanisms. Mr. Gore is simply going to switch on the government printing presses
at the Treasury Department. The underlying rationale for issuing these bonds
is that federal interest payments will be reduced if his plan to pay off the
federal debt is realized. Under Mr. Gore’s proposal, however, paying down the
debt will not relieve us of interest costs. Mr. Gore would continue paying interest
on the current debt in the form of the added government bonds that he would
issue to the Social Security trust funds.
Under a version of the Gore proposal that has been evaluated by the Social
Security actuaries, the Treasury Department would issue added government bonds
to the Social Security trust funds of $122.4 billion in 2011. In following years,
additional bonds would be issued to the tune of $145 billion in 2012, $169.8
billion in 2013, $196.7 billion in 2014, $225.7 billion in 2015, and $257 billion
a year in 2016 and beyond. The added Gore bonds issued to the trust funds between
2011-16 would add up to slightly more than $1.1 trillion. Including interest
of 7% a year, Mr. Gore’s proposal would add $1.3 trillion to the trust funds.
The beauty of the Gore proposal -- from an inside-the-Beltway perspective
at least -- is that it has no effect on the budget during its early years. Delaying
the issuance of the bonds until 2011 conveniently takes the proposal’s funding
outside the 10-year budget window used for evaluating current policy proposals.
Moreover, when the bonds are issued, they will simultaneously create a cost
entry to the general budget but an identical offsetting income entry to Social
Security, leaving the combined federal budget unaffected. Given the way federal
accounting works, this proposal is nothing more than a paper transaction for
the next 20 years or so.
Eventually, though, the bill will come due. Starting in about 2020 under the
Gore plan, the Social Security trust fund will have to start cashing some of
the extra bonds it receives. There are a very limited number of ways to pay
off these bonds, and they all either result in higher taxes, bigger budget deficits
or reduced government services.
Policymakers could raise taxes, but do we want to impose higher taxes on our
children than we are willing to pay? Or policymakers could refinance the bonds
by borrowing from the general credit markets, but do we want to return to an
extended period of deficits like those of the 1980s and much of the 1990s? Some
future administration could cut government expenditures, but where? Mr. Gore
hasn’t said whether he would have us spend less on defense, education, highways
or farm programs. The only other means of keeping Social Security in balance
would be cutting benefits -- but Mr. Gore says his plan guarantees benefits
until at least 2054.
If Mr. Bush were to use Mr. Gore’s proposal to finance his individual accounts,
it is not clear how Mr. Bush’s proposal would cost any more than his opponent’s.
Mr. Gore, the master of facts, has told us the Bush plan will cost an extra
$1 trillion. For the sake of argument, let’s assume that Mr. Gore is right:
Mr. Bush must finance his individual accounts from the Social Security trust
funds, and it will cost $1 trillion. But if Mr. Bush were to use some of Mr.
Gore’s $1.3 trillion worth of bonds to finance his individual accounts, then
his proposal would cost less than the vice president’s. In fact, it would eventually
cost much less, since it has the potential to provide solid funding to the bottom
tier of our national retirement system.
Why has Mr. Bush proposed to begin funding accounts for young workers? If
a 21-year-old worker saves a consistent portion of her salary until she retires,
most of her accumulated benefit at retirement will be from earned interest.
Even under conservative assumptions, her earned interest could easily be as
much as 70% of her total benefit at retirement. Funding retirement benefits
for a broad sweep of middle- and upper-income workers has the potential to pay
tremendous benefits to our economy by reducing the amount that workers must
contribute to retirement benefits via their payroll taxes.
If we were to issue Gore bonds to workers so that they could open their own
retirement accounts under a Bush-type of reform, it would cost money right now,
which Mr. Gore’s approach does not. But it would not change one iota the true,
long-term cost of these bonds. If we finance these accounts using some of the
current budget surplus, we can convert that surplus into savings in the hands
of millions of U.S. workers. It is much less likely that future presidents or
congresses could raid those accounts than if the surplus remains in the hands
of the government, where it must compete with other worthy causes. Thus, the
Bush approach has more potential to create real savings and associated benefits
than the Gore plan.
The big problem with the current debate over Social Security is that Mr. Gore
is demanding that Mr. Bush provide a detailed cost accounting of his proposal
without having done so himself. If I were George W. Bush, I would say to Al
Gore: “I have laid out how I intend to finance my Social Security reform proposal.
But if you prefer, I’m willing to use your bonds to finance my Social Security
reform plan. By your own accounting, Mr. Gore, my bonds will cost no more than
your bonds and may cost less. I will also consider using your proposed method
of paying for those bonds as soon as you tell us what that is.”
This article appeared in the Wall Street Journal on November 1, 2000.
Scheiber is vice president of research at consulting firm Watson Wyatt and
co-author with John Shoven of “The Real Deal: The History and Future of Social
Security” (Yale University Press, 2000). Scheiber was as a member of the government’s
1994-1996 Advisory Council on Social Security, which examined the Social Security
problem and proposed solutions based on pre-funding of the system.
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