Dark Bilious Vapors

But how could I deny that I possess these hands and this body, and withal escape being classed with persons in a state of insanity, whose brains are so disordered and clouded by dark bilious vapors....
--Rene Descartes, Meditations on First Philosophy: Meditation I

Home » Archives » January 2005 » Social Security Privatization: A good idea?

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01/11/2005: Social Security Privatization: A good idea?


Not if experience is a guide:

A conservative government sweeps to power for a second term. It views its victory as a mandate to slash the role of the state. In its first term, this policy objective was met by cutting taxes for the wealthy. Its top priority for its second term is tackling what it views as an enduring vestige of socialism: its system of social insurance for the elderly. Declaring the current program unaffordable in 50 years’ time, the administration proposes the privatization of a portion of old-age benefits. In exchange for giving up some future benefits, workers would get a tax rebate to put into an investment account to save for their own retirement.

George W. Bush’s America in 2005? Think again. The year was 1984, the nation was Britain, the government was that of Margaret Thatcher -- and the results have been a disaster that America is about to emulate.

For all the fanfare that surrounds the Bush administration’s efforts to present a bold new idea on pension reform, the truth is that it is not new at all. In fact, the proposal looks suspiciously like the plan set in train during Thatcher’s first term in 1979 and which has since led Britain to the brink of a crisis. Since then, the nation’s basic pension, which is paid for out of tax receipts, has shrunk dramatically. The United Kingdom has the stingiest state pension program of any G8 nation, and there is growing consensus -- even among British conservatives -- that reform is needed. And ironically enough, considering that America is on the verge of copying Britain’s mistake, most experts seek reform in the direction of a more generous, and simpler, basic state pension -- one similar in design, in other words, to America’s Social Security program.
And that gives me a sinking feeling, because as A Wise Man once said:
Human beings, who are almost unique in having the ability to learn from the experience of others, are also remarkable for their apparent disinclination to do so.
--Douglas Adams
And as we know from bitter experience, George Dumbya Bush is even more disinclined to learn from experience than the average human being.

Len on 01.11.05 @ 12:29 PM CST



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Replies: 2 comments

on Tuesday, January 11th, 2005 at 4:59 PM CST, cube said

this is the frist time i have heard the comparsion with the briatian situation. it also happens to be the frist time that i have heard about britians pension system.

But i have heard bush's plan compared to chile's move over to private accounts.

Intresting.

on Tuesday, January 11th, 2005 at 5:08 PM CST, cube said

ahhhh.....

"When contracting out began, predictions from the Government Actuary’s Department forecast that no more than 500,000 people would take up personal pensions. A former official told the Financial Times at the time, “We all told the secretary of state that personal pensions were really only good for the very young or for very high earners.” But in the first five years, the number of private pensions sold would turn out to be 10 times those two segments of the population. "

this where britian screwed up, from what i understand bush only wants to allow younger workers to put money in private accounts.

and here is where britian screwed up also, but i have not heard anything about tax rebates in Bush's plan.

"In other words, the government was spending much more than it was saving by bribing people to leave SERPS."

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