The Washington Post's war on Social Security
By Seth Sandronsky
Online
Journal Contributing Writer
Nov 28, 2006, 00:33
A Washington Post reporter has a problem with Social
Security. She wrote that �the rising costs of Social Security and government
health-care programs� are on tap as subject for debate in future talks between
the GOP and Democrats in Congress.
Medicare and Medicaid are at-risk financially. In brief, the
reason for the financial fragility of Medicare and Medicaid is the
affordability crisis of the U.S. health-care system.
Against this backdrop of the national health-care crisis,
Social Security is the most successful insurance program going. The key to its
success is the social pooling of risk. Social Security is not an investment.
Individual savings accounts are not insurance coverage.
President George W. Bush has tried to partially privatize Social Security,
proposing individual investment accounts for younger workers. They remain the
rhetorical target as potential members of the president�s �ownership society.�
Now increasingly, these younger workers face being paid
lower wages as new hires. Add their student fees for higher education that are
rising with a grim constancy. The White House is well aware of the social
conditions that this demographic is living, which can make it desperate and
therefore at-risk to scare tactics.
One example is the oft-repeated claim that Social Security
will be gone when young workers retire. Thus there is a need to change the
program now. The go-to guy for such Social Security reform is Treasury
Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr.
As the Bush presidency faces low polling numbers for its
foreign and domestic policies, he needs political allies for yet another go at
building support to reform Social Security. So we see an olive branch of sorts
being extended to the Democratic-majority Congress to discuss Social Security.
The problem with the administration�s plan to privatize
Social Security remains what it has been. The program�s finances are sound, on
rock-solid ground for the next 40 years with no change at all, the non-partisan
Congressional Budget Office reports.
Presumably, the Post reporter is ignorant of this fact. It
is not arguable. Maybe that explains the editorializing in her reporting,
combining the finances of Social Security with Medicare and Medicaid.
Seth
Sandronsky is a member of Sacramento Area Peace Action and a co-editor of Because People Matter, Sacramento's
progressive paper. He can be reached at: bpmnews@nicetechnology.com.
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