The Ryan budget, Part I: Social Security

House Republicans today released a budget plan drafted by U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, chairman of the House Budget Committee, that claims to cut government spending by $6.2 trillion over the next decade, lower the top tax rate on the wealthiest of Americans to 25 percent, cut the debt by $4.4 trillion, raise real GDP by $1.5 trillion over the next decade, restore Social Security and Medicare to solvency and bring the unemployment rate down to 4 percent by 2015.

U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan (AP photo)

U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan (AP photo)

Other than that, it doesn’t really promise much.

Given the importance of this debate, I thought I’d start a series of posts looking into those and other claims. And I want to begin with Ryan’s plan for saving Social Security, in part because it’s pretty quick and simple.

You see, the much-ballyhooed “Path to Prosperity” doesn’t even address the issue. Here are its recommendations regarding Social Security (p.47):

“– Force policymakers to come to the table and enact common-sense reforms to keep the program solvent for current beneficiaries and make it stronger for future generations. Social Security must be reformed to prevent severe cuts in future benefits.

— Set in motion the process of reforming Social Security by establishing a requirement that in the event that the Social Security program is not sustainable, the President, in conjunction with the Board of Trustees, must submit a plan for restoring balance to the fund. The budget then requires congressional leaders in both the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate to put forward their best ideas as well.

– Move the conversation to solutions that save Social Security, thus providing the space to forge a bipartisan path forward and ensure that Social Security remains a key part of retirement security for the future.”

In effect, it is merely a plan to someday force other people to come up with a plan. To my mind, that falls a little short of bold and forthright.

In the budget document, Ryan does attempt to set the parameters for debate over Social Security’s future, and he makes two essential points.

First, he takes tax hikes off the table as any part of the solution. More specifically, he opposes any attempt to levy Social Security taxes on income above the current FICA ceiling — set at $106,800 in 2010 — claiming that such a move “would create a significant drag on economic growth, job creation, productivity and wages.”

Second, Ryan dismisses the notion that Social Security has a trust fund it can draw upon to pay future benefits, saying the claim is “derived from dubious government accounting.”

“From 1983 to 2011, the trust fund collected more in Social Security taxes than it paid out in Social Security benefits,” he acknowledges. “But the government borrowed all of these surpluses and spent them on other government programs unrelated to Social Security.”

In other words, he argues, the $2.6 trillion paper surplus doesn’t exist. The funds that working Americans thought they had been socking away through their weekly FICA taxes in preparation for retirement have already been spent on other things, and the idea that FICA taxes were truly separate from income taxes, with the revenue being set aside for separate purposes …. well, that was merely an unfortunate illusion.

Sorry about that. You were betrayed; get over it and suck it up.

However, there’s a fundamentally important contradiction between Ryan’s two points, a contradiction that strikes at the heart of fairness and equity.

If the Social Security surplus really doesn’t exist, if it was just an illusion that government has no obligation to honor, then the extra FICA taxes that working and middle class Americans have been paying for the past 28 years were also an illusion. In effect, since the money was being siphoned off to fund general government, those taxes were just an income tax by another name. That’s the real effect of Ryan’s claim.

However, if you accept that harsh reality, how do you justify exempting income above $106,000 from those taxes? If the money really isn’t going into Social Security, then why do working and middle class Americans have to pay it while more affluent Americans are largely protected?

Ryan and his GOP colleagues can’t have it both ways. They can’t justify the income cap on FICA taxes by claiming that the revenue is being set aside for Social Security, and then turn around and claim that it wasn’t being set aside for Social Security after all. There’s no consistency to those positions.

Well, let me take that back. There is one consistent thread between those two claims. The argument in favor of preserving the FICA cap protects upper-income Americans at the expense of the middle and working classes. Likewise, the argument that there is no Social Security surplus, and that benefits will have to be cut as a result, also favors upper-income Americans at the expense of the middle and working classes.

The path to prosperity indeed.

– Jay Bookman

318 comments Add your comment

Billybob

April 5th, 2011
6:18 pm

LWM,
the fact that you agree with what bernie ‘the socialist’ sanders has to say and his ideas, that exculdes you from any ’serious’ ideas about our capitalist economy…..just trying to be serious like bookman wants.

Billybob

April 5th, 2011
6:21 pm

LWM,
I mean……you wouldn’t go to a hair salon to get automotive service on your car would you? Seriously….

independent thinker

April 5th, 2011
6:38 pm

Jay- At least Ryan is trying to address the most serious issue confronting the federal government today. I( cannot say that for anything Pelosi and Reid did or are proposing.
What is missing in the plan is serious cut backs in military bases and expenditures overseas with no return compensation by countries that shoild be rpaying us like Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, etc.. Why do we still have over twenty five bases in Germany? Isn’t World War II over? also no one addresses the unfunsded mandates passed by Republican Presidents that morph into budget busters out of control. Like EPA (Nixon) ; EMTALA-free hospital care for everyone (Reagan); ADA -Bush 41; Medicare Part D (Bush 43). All were passed to get votes and have created beuracracies and mandatory spending by states, hoispitals , transportation authorities, etc. that are budget busters. And we will not even talk about other out of control military programs over the years for unnecessary weapons and adventures. We spent over a trillion dollars by now in Iraq and Afghanistan- what do we have to show for it as repayments or security?How much did we waste on that invisible fence with Mexico?
And then we get companies like GE that pay no taxes because of loopholes they helped create. Oh yeah the Republicans claim lowering the tax rate for companies will solve the problem. Well Ireland tried that – the multi nationals fled there and Ireland is now totally bankrupt. Great idea -huh? How about a mandatory flat tax rate for all companies and taxing there overseas income if they want government contracts?

Wise with age

April 5th, 2011
6:40 pm

Bookman, you are quick to say that Obama has, in fact, presented a 2012 budget and where I can go to see it but now “quickly” tell me where I can go to see his 2011 budget. I am interested in your response. I bet you are unable to come up with it.

Hillbilly Deluxe

April 5th, 2011
6:43 pm

Force policymakers to come to the table and enact common-sense reforms to keep the program solvent for current beneficiaries and make it stronger for future generations. Social Security must be reformed to prevent severe cuts in future benefits.

Good idea but just how is he going to do it?

Young Republican

April 5th, 2011
6:49 pm

I will not be taxed to support ignorant Democrats. Bare your own cross, if you can.

Yippee

April 5th, 2011
6:55 pm

Man, if it wasn’t for Jay I would still beleive that Republicans lie. I am clear on it now though, it is the democrats that are the jackasses.

ODDOWL

April 5th, 2011
9:00 pm

Paul Ryan looks eerily like that dracula muppet on sesame street on PBS. Ryan is a narrow eyed, bloodsucking vampire bat. My Mother told me that people with narrow eyes are untrustworthy. When the Republicans are finished dismantling America, all of us will be drinking tea brewed from leftover teabags.

Brad Spencer

April 6th, 2011
9:24 am

Hard to figure: is Ryan a liar, a fool, or both?

Good point about the FICA taxes.

The outrageous thing is that when right-wingers pontificate about how politicians can any day simply take away Social Security they’re talking about themselves. They are the ones who would take it away and they are the ones who desire to take it away.

Brad Spencer

April 6th, 2011
9:31 am

Here is a good rule to insist upon when it comes to discussing Social Security: any change that is proposed should be subjected to the same analysis as is done annually for the current Social Security system. W and his gang made all sorts of claims about SS when he was touting his scheme but they provided virtually no detail (like Ryan now) and no analysis at all. Perhaps everyone could join me in saying “Hey, if retirees could live better by having personal accounts instead of the current system that would be great.” But in particular those who will one day be the retirees ought to do an analysis to see if that will happen for them or not. All W ever promised was a chance to do better. Will, friends, there’s lots of places where you can buy (for $1) a little slip of paper that gives you a chance to win millions – but most of the time that chance doesn’t materialize. Before accepting any W-style plan ought you not find out if the “chance” being offered is probable? That “chance” to do better carries with it a “chance” to do worse. Doing worse means having less than current retirees have. If you’re going to retire (alternate options being work forever or die early) don’t you owe yourself some up-front thought?

Brad Spencer

April 6th, 2011
9:43 am

You want “common sense reform”? I’ll give you “common sense reform.” As follows.

Compute the next year’s Social Security benefits exactly as is done now. Then make a long-term forward projection for the status of Social Security, just as is done now. If that projection (say for 40 years into the future) shows the system in the black for the entire time go ahead and implement the benefit increase for the next year. If any time in that projection period the balance goes negative reduce the benefits for the next year to 99% of what was computed (but not less than the current level.) That is, if done, a benefit reduction. The design intent is to preserve, forever, the self-financing (FICA taxes cover all benefits) nature of Social Security. A 1% reduction doesn’t seem like much but if needed it will, over the years, compound to a sizable reduction.

The people, through Congress, would always have the option to implement a benefit increase (along with balancing revenue increase) to keep retirees from being thrown into abject poverty. The suggestion above keeps the system solvent without requiring constant tweaking by Congress.

Brad Spencer

April 6th, 2011
9:54 am

Might as well also point out what the right wing ignores in its anti-Social Security propaganda: if retirees are supported at a particular level then no matter how that support is financed it’s the same dollar amount. No matter how the support is channeled the support is provided by current workers to the retirees. That “personal account” scheme Bush tried to force through would have the current workers provide the benefits through what Bush called the “interest” derived from the workers efforts. For stocks that’s really dividends, not interest. Whether the worker is supporting the retiree through his FICA taxes or through dividends arising form his work he is providing the support. If the worker-to-retiree ratio goes down it goes down independent of how retiree support is channeled. If retirees get support. Even if the personal accounts are not investments in stock the income has to arise, ultimately, from someone’s work. If interest doesn’t represent some form of actual increase in value then it’s just inflation. You cant live on inflation. It’s the other way: inflation decreases purchasing power, makes living expenses go up.

Now, yes, it should be possible for current workers to divert part of their production to providing assets (real, not financial, not numbers on paper or stored as magnetic impulses in a computer somewhere) that can assist in their support after retirement.

ipscshooter

April 6th, 2011
11:10 am

“T hose taxes were just an income tax by another name. That’s the real effect of Ryan’s claim.”

I believe that is also what the Supreme Court has been saying since about 1938…

[...] more of the burden to working and middle-class Americans. When combined with the payroll tax, which Ryan concedes is a surtax on earned income below $106,000, a large number of working class and middle-class [...]

[...] for corporations indefinitely, and lowering the corporate tax rate to 25 percent. As Jay Bookman notes in the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Ryan offers no concrete plans to address Social Security’s [...]

[...] for corporations indefinitely, and lowering the corporate tax rate to 25 percent. As Jay Bookman notes in the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Ryan offers no concrete plans to address Social Security’s [...]

[...] for corporations indefinitely, and lowering the corporate tax rate to 25 percent. As Jay Bookman notes in the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Ryan offers no concrete plans to address Social Security’s [...]

The Truth

April 11th, 2011
9:09 pm

So the GOP wants to lower the filthy rich tax bracket to 25%. Add in all the loopholes they already enjoy and they will pay nothing but enjoy everything this country has to offer. Warren Buffet, the 2nd richest man in the entire world, already admitted he pays less income taxes than his secretary. The Republicans will do whatever is necessary to establish a slave society.