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Social Security Talking Points
Social Security and Social Work
- Social Security provides economic security to some 44
million Americans who are retired, disabled or the
survivor of a deceased parent. It provides a permanent, inflation-protected
benefit that provides a higher replacement rate for those who
had lower earnings.
- Social security is predicated on the notion that there
is an intergenerational, shared responsibility for basic income
security of all older people. Just as we are responsible
for our children's economic security, so are we responsible for
the economic security of our seniors. Social security allows
us to meet this responsibility in a just way.
- Social security privatization places undue investment
risk on seniors living on a fixed income. Individuals
already can choose to place their own money in private retirement
accounts. Sometimes these accounts earn money; other times they
lose money. In social security, investment risk is borne by the
federal government, not individuals. Seniors need the economic
security provided by current social security, not economic insecurity
that would be certain to follow in private plans.
Talking Points from moveon.org
- Social Security provides monthly benefits to some 44
million Americans who are retired, disabled or the
survivor of a deceased parent. It provides most of the income
for older Americans — some 64 percent of their support. It has
lifted generations of seniors out of poverty.
- Social Security is not in crisis. That is an
outright lie perpetrated in order to create the urgency for radical
changes. Under conservative forecasts, the long-term challenges
in Social Security do not manifest themselves until 2042. Even
then Social Security has 70 percent of needed funds. That shortfall
is smaller than the amount needed in 1983, the last time we overhauled
Social Security. George Bush's Social Security crisis-talk is an
effort to create a specter of doom — just like the weapons of
mass destruction claim in Iraq .
- Phasing out Social Security and replacing it with privatized
accounts means one thing: massive cuts in monthly benefits for
everybody. Social Security privatization requires diverting
taxes used to pay current benefits into privatized accounts invested
in risky stocks. Without that money, Social Security benefits
will inevitably be cut — some proposals even cut benefits of
current retirees. These benefit cuts are inevitable, since diverting
Social Security money into privatized accounts means less money
to pay current and future benefits.
- Every serious privatization proposal raises the Social
Security retirement age to 70. That might be fine if
you're a Washington special interest lobbyist but it is incredibly
unfair to blue-collar Americans with tough, physical jobs, or
for African Americans and Latinos with lower life expectancies.
- Privatization means gambling with your retirement security. There
is probably an appropriate place for a little stock market risk
in retirement planning — but it isn't Social Security. Privatization
exposes your entire retirement portfolio to stock market risks
— and the risk that you'll outlive any of your savings at retirement.
You can't outlive your Social Security benefit.
- So who does benefit? Wall Street. Giant financial
services firms have been salivating for decades over the prospect
of taking over Social Security. Wall Street would make billions
of dollars in profit by managing the privatized accounts — money
that would come directly from your benefits.
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