Coming Soon to Your Mailbox: Government Misinformation - EPI Viewpoints
By Amy Chasanov
April 5, 2005
Opinion pieces and speeches by EPI staff and associates.
[ THIS OP-ED ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN THE LONE STAR ICONOCLAST (TX) ON MARCH 23, 2005. ]
Coming soon to your mailbox: Government misinformation
By Amy Chasanov
My annual Social Security Statement arrived recently. Right
there on the front page under the heading. "About Social Security's
future" is another example of how the administration is spending
taxpayer dollars to push misleading, even downright false
information. While senior officials from the Social Security
Administration barnstorm the country to help promote the
president's plan to privatize Social Security, a more subtle part
of the campaign package is arriving in our mailboxes.
In 2004, the Bush administration spent $88 million on public
relations, up 128% from 2000. Government agencies have paid pliable
columnists to pitch for administration policies on education and
social issues. The administration has been caught passing off
phony, pre-packaged news videos as if they were real reports by
real journalists. The General Accounting Office concluded that two
of these ersatz reports crossed the line into illegal, covert
propaganda. It's not just inappropriate, it's illegal for an
administration to use taxpayer dollars to try to manipulate public
opinion like this.
In January, a 31-year veteran with the Social Security
Administration testified at a Senate hearing that frontline agency
workers are instructed "to promote the idea that Social Security is
in crisis and that Social Security privatization is the answer."
She said this is the first time career employees had been asked to
take sides in a major political controversy. And, a few weeks ago,
House Democrats released a report demonstrating how the Social
Security Administration -- which is supposed to be nonpartisan --
has systematically changed its publications to undermine public
confidence and press for changes.
Which takes us back to the Social Security Statements mailed to
millions of workers to help them plan for retirement. It claims the
system is "facing serious future financial problems" and "action is
needed soon to make sure the system is sound." It also blames
demographics, falsely asserting that our economy cannot maintain
future scheduled benefits.
While the administration has been generating a false sense of
crisis, it has failed the first test of leadership: to present a
plan that addresses the problem.
The administration's only clear proposal so far-private
accounts-would do nothing to make Social Security more solvent.
An expert at a recent White House briefing on privatization
admitted as much. Private accounts actually make things worse, not
better, requiring trillions in new borrowing and diverting money
that would otherwise pay current beneficiaries.
Here's a little-known fact that you won't find in your Social
Security Statement: the trust fund is actually more solvent today
than it has been in years and it keeps improving. According to the
Congressional Budget Office, there is ample money to pay 100% of
scheduled benefits until today's high schoolers are nearing
retirement. After that, Social Security can pay 78% of scheduled
benefits, which (because benefits rise over time) is higher than
those being paid today. The rest of government's finances should be
so strong.
But what about demon demographics? Rising longevity and aging baby
boomers aren't news. While demographics are easy to blame, that
argument pits younger workers against the elderly in a zero-sum
game. That's not just wrong, it's inaccurate. Research finds that
the most significant reason for the shortfall is increasing wage
inequality.
Because wage growth has been slower than predicted-especially for
low and middle- income workers-Social Security collected less
revenue than expected. At the top of the wage scale, where most of
wage growth has been concentrated, Social Security taxes are only
collected on the first $90,000 of wages. Even though that cap rises
annually to reflect increases in average wage growth,
faster-than-average growth at the top has put 15% of all wages
above the cap -- up from 10% in 1983. In other words, when the rich
get richer and the poor get poorer, Social Security's finances
suffer.
Serious and balanced proposals to address the long-term shortfall
should be carefully considered. But, we should not rush to displace
this important program that has kept millions of retirees, workers,
and families out of poverty with a program that puts these same
individuals at risk.
President Bush's State of the Union warned that some would try to
mislead us about Social Security and urged us not to buy their
story. Let's follow that advice.
Amy Chasanov is deputy policy director at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C.
[ POSTED TO VIEWPOINTS ON APRIL 5, 2005 ]
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