Boomers fleece
Generation X with Social Security
Generation Xers and
Gen-Yers like me have a hard time showing interest in what goes on in
Washington. But we had better end our apathy—and soon—or we'll
spend the rest of our lives paying for it. Members of the generation that came
before us, the Baby Boomers, are trying to pull a scam under the guise of
“protecting” Social Security. If they succeed, we and our children
will be the poorer for it.
Everyone knows
Social Security is in trouble (and President Bush's Commission to Strengthen
Social Security is due to announce reform measures before Christmas). But few
people understand what that trouble is and whom it will affect. Understanding
that is the key to understanding the scam.
Right now, Social
Security is in great health. This year, like so many before, hundreds of
billions of dollars will pour into it from FICA and payroll taxes, and only
some will go back out as benefits to retirees. The rest will be exchanged for
government bonds, which the federal government will pay back with interest to
Social Security in the coming years.
But things will
change in the next decade, when the Boomers will retire and start collecting
benefits. By 2016, so many people will be drawing Social Security that the
money needed to cover benefits will be more than what we Gen-X/Y workers will
be paying in taxes. Fortunately, the program will be able to cash in the bonds
that it’s now buying, and will use the repaid principal and interest to
keep up the benefits.
However, that can
only support Social Security for a few more decades. The bonds will all be
cashed in by 2038, just as we Gen-Xers (whose Social Security tax money will
purchase many of those bonds and whose federal tax money will pay them off)
approach retirement age. So, just as we’re about to collect Social
Security, there will be nothing left in the Social Security storehouse for us
to collect.
Hence, the Social
Security crisis does not involve today’s seniors. Social Security will
have plenty of money for the next 35 years. Instead, the crisis concerns us
Gen-X/Yers, who will pay in a lot and receive just a little.
Ever since we
Gen-X/Yers began working, we’ve paid 12.4 percent of our earnings to
Social Security, half taken through the FICA tax on our paycheck and half
through the payroll tax. In the coming years, Congress likely will increase
that rate to more than 17 percent to delay the 2038 catastrophe. What is more,
the Medicare tax (which is now a mere 2.9 percent) will increase because that
program faces an even worse crisis than Social Security.
In contrast, the
Boomers will get a bargain. When they entered the workforce in the late 1960s,
they paid only 6.5 percent of their earnings to Social Security and nothing to
Medicare. For about half of their working years, the Boomers paid 10 percent or
less to Social Security and less than 1.25 percent to Medicare. Only from 1990
on, when the Boomers had earned paychecks for a quarter-century, did they start
paying 12.4 percent to Social Security and 2.9 percent to Medicare, the same
percentage we Gen-X/Yers have paid our whole lives.
That’s the
Boomers’ bargain: They’ve paid less of their earnings into Social
Security than we Gen-X/Yers, yet they’ll receive more in benefits than we
will and we’ll pick up the tab. And when we retire, there will be no
money saved in Social Security to pay for our retirement, unless we pull the
same scam on our children that the Boomers are pulling on us.
The Boomers are
working hard to protect their sweet deal. Many Boomer-elected politicians claim
it’s “too risky” to change Social Security and do away with
the scam. One, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., even asserts that the program is in
no trouble at all and should be left alone.
But we Gen-X/Yers
are catching on; we’re seeing through the phony claims and recognizing
the generational cash-grab scam for what it is. And we are beginning to realize
that we need to offer this warning: If the Boomers don’t reform Social
Security now, they’ll have no right to complain when we do so in the
future.
Thomas A. Firey
Courtesy of KRT