Social Security has rightly been
acclaimed “the most successful American anti-poverty program in history.” Once considered so popular that proposals to
altar or abolish it were widely considered the “third rail of American politics”—too
dangerous to seriously advance. But that
was before years of a carefully managed drum beat of hysteria that the system
was somehow “running out of money” which has convinced many folks, despite all
of the evidence to the contrary, that they would never live to collect what
they have been paying in for their entire working lives.
That kind of
talk was the nose of the camel under the tent that allowed retirement ages to
creep upward and talk of limiting or reducing future benefits become
fashionable in some quarters. Proposals
to “privatize” all or part of the system in whole or in part seemed to be
gaining steam. These would allow younger
workers to take part or all of their Social Security contributions and invest
them in private IRA like accounts.
The wind was
kicked out of that fantasy in the recent stock market collapse, which
understandably raised doubt in the safety of investment in the volatile Stock Market.
But some bad
ideas just won’t stay dead. The alleged libertarians of the Tea Party surged to real power in the House of Representatives as a voracious,
disciplined block within the majority Republican
caucus driving the whole party dramatically, derangedly to the right
virtually overnight.
The Tea Party
House Freshmen found an incumbent ally in rising Wisconsinite Paul Ryan, a devotee of Ayn Rand in all of her sociopathic
glory. Ryan, elevated to leadership
in the caucus, came up with his famous Ryan
budget. And suddenly all “discretionary”
social service expenditures and Medicare
were in the cross hairs for either outright elimination or a slow death by
a thousand cuts. Not content, Ryan has
made clear that Social Security, too, must be “reformed” virtually out of existence.
By shoring up
his tepid support among right wing zealots of his party by tapping Ryan as his
running mate, Mitt Romney has tied
himself to the hip to the public face of the destruction of Social
Security.
That’s good
politics in the short run—Tea Partiers were threatening to sit out the
presidential race in sufficient numbers that Romney’s number crunchers were
probably convinced that he could lose a couple of critical states and their Electoral College votes without
them.
But in the long
run, it is likely the doom of the GOP’s fading hopes. Most Americans still support—and rely upon—Social
Security regardless of party affiliation.
For older voters, who have been skewing more heavily Republican in recent
years, it is an especially sensitive issue.
President Obama and the Democrats can hardly believe their good
fortune. They will tie the Republican
ticket to killing Social Security with the kind of relentless, dramatic and
maddening attack ads that the GOP itself pioneered. And the Republicans have no good way to
counter the attacks, except by trying to divert attention to the fact that the
President is an honest-to-god- Negro and to fantasies that he is a foreign born
Muslim out to confiscate guns, force
abortion on 13 year olds, and destroy marriage.
The trouble is
that only works on the sheep already in the fold. Everyone else just shrugs their
shoulders. But they won’t shrug their
shoulders at the dismantlement of Social Security.
Of course the
demographics of a lot of Baby Boomers retiring
together over the next few years in a kind of slow motion avalanche and the
reduction of collection of FICA taxes
since the economic collapse due to heavy unemployment and actually falling
wages for those still employed has put a strain on the system, which could
theoretically go bankrupt in a few years unless “something is done.”
But that
something does not have to be further raises in the retirement age, reduction
of benefits, privatization, or changing the system from “social insurance” to a
means tested welfare program—the later program sometime surprisingly advanced
by some on the right knowing that it would erode support for the system among
higher income voters. Senator Bernie Sanders, the Vermont Independent and others have
pointed out that simply raising the cap on wage income subject to FICA taxes
and/or levying FICA taxes on non-wage income above a certain level would make
the system solvent through most of the rest of the century.
Given the
situation it is not surprising that this year the anniversary of the establishment
of the Social Security System has attracted more than the usual attention
On August 14,
1935 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt
signed the Social Security Act into law.
It was the crowning achievement of the New Deal.
Before it was enacted those who lived beyond their
income producing years were the poorest sector of society, particularly those
who could not rely on the support and/or charity of family. And the necessity of supporting an elderly
relative drove many young families into poverty because of the extra expenses
and the foregone income of those who had to become caretakers.
Today, those over 65 are the least likely of all age cohorts to live in poverty.
The battle for Federal retirement insurance was a long one. The first such scheme was advocated as early
as the 1820’s by trade unionists and
socialists in Europe. German
Chancellor Otto Von Bismarck implemented the first old age insurance plan
in 1889 in the hope of achieving social stability in the new German Empire and uniting the loyalties
of citizens of the various principalities he had brought together. The German system provided
contributory retirement benefits and disability benefits as well. Participation
was mandatory and contributions were taken from the employee, the employer and
the government. It would become
essentially the model for F.D.R.’s initiative.
Social security
plans had spread over Europe but were resisted as unwanted government
interference in business in this country.
Social security, along with unemployment insurance, a government medical
plan, the eight hour day, and limits to child labor were key platforms of Eugene V. Debs’ Socialist Party platform
of 1912. It was widely supported by most
of the labor movement, although some craft unions which had wrung private
pension plans from employers were opposed.
Roosevelt’s Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins spearheaded
the drive for Social Security for the administration. Republicans in Congress bitterly opposed the program, decrying it as socialist,
un-American, unconstitutional, and a
business destroying tax burden. Sound
familiar?
But the program
was still wildly popular with voters, who elected large majorities of Democrats
committed to the program in both houses of Congress. Some compromises, however, had to be made and
the original system was far from perfect.
Nearly 50% of all workers were excluded from coverage including workers in agriculture, domestic service,
government employees, and most teachers, nurses, hospital employees,
librarians, and social workers. The act also did not cover those who worked
intermittently including most seasonal workers.
These provisions fell especially heavy on women
and minorities who were disproportionately engaged in these occupations. 90% of all domestic workers were women and
2/3 of all employed Black women
worked in domestic service. And Southern
Black men were predominately engaged as agricultural workers. For these reasons the NAACP actually opposed the legislation that reached Roosevelt’s
desk call it, “a sieve with holes just big enough for the majority of Negroes
to fall through.”
Most women qualified for old age insurance only
through their husbands or children. Mothers’ pensions based entitlements on
the presumption that mothers would be unemployed.
The Social Security Act also established the Aid to Dependent Children, a welfare
program designed to support children in unemployed families who had exhausted
unemployment insurance. Management of
these programs was left to the States, at the insistence of Southern Democrats
who did not want to “disturb the racial status quo.” As a result Southern states routinely adopted
rules making it difficult or nearly impossible for Black families to
quality.
This became one of the major reasons, along with
increased employment opportunities as the country geared up for war later in
the decade, for the Great Migration
of rural Southern Blacks to Northern cities.
In 1937 the Social Security withholding tax went into effect and the system began building
reserves to make the first payments to retirees, originally scheduled for 1942. Some economists charged that the income taken
out of circulation by the tax was responsible for the 1937 “Roosevelt Recession.” Others
have pointed to drastic reductions in Federal spending because of budget
concerns and because key elements of the New
Deal had been declared unconstitutional as being the real culprit in the
downturn. Some felt that building a huge
reserve before beginning to make pay-outs was a drag on the economy.
So in 1939 Social Security was amended to begin
making payout two years earlier than planned.
This caused the plan to become de facto as “pay as you go” system with
current workers supporting the immediate benefits to retirees instead of
relying of a large accumulated fund. The
amendments did establish a trust fund
for any surplus funds managed by the Secretary
of the Treasury. The money could be invested in both non-marketable and
marketable securities.
But because this trust fund became a Treasury Department asset, Congress
later began to borrow against it to fund current spending.
Amendments to the act also tied women’s benefits
more closely than ever to their husband’s income. The amendment added wives,
elderly widows, and dependent survivors of covered male workers to those who
could receive old age pensions. These individuals had previously been granted
lump sum payments upon only death or coverage through the Aid to Dependent
Children program.
While this rescued many widows from poverty, the
amendments also devalued the value of benefits a woman could receive from her
own labor. If a married wage-earning
woman’s own benefit was worth less than 50% of her husband’s benefit, she was
treated as a wife, not a worker and the dependents women who were covered by
Social Security benefits were ineligible for her benefits. Changes were also made to the Aid to
Dependent Children program, including raising the age of eligible children to
18.
Despite being far from perfect, the first monthly
payment was issued on January 31, 1940 to Ida
May Fuller of Ludlow, Vermont.
The 1937 Roosevelt Recession is usually attributed to the economic concept of 'Austerity' but the 37 example has led to no modern country trying to improve the economy by not spending. /sarcasm off
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