In a New York Times opinion posted on October 26, Glenn Kramon and I discussed some of the reforms needed for programs for the elderly and near-elderly. (Note: when allowed in a few weeks, it will be reposted here on Substack). The article suggests that in addition to tax increases, some reductions in the rate of growth of benefits promised to future cohorts of retirees will be required to deal with such pressures as a decline in workers to retirees, benefit increases scheduled to grow forever faster than national economic growth, and the federal debt problem. We worried about the rising relative needs of the often-poorer young and working class and the increased burdens being placed on them. We paid special focus on ways to encourage more work as people live longer. Though modest in the short run, improvements in Social Security and overall government fiscal balances can be quite substantial over a long period. Additional work brings in more revenues and allows benefits to be concentrated more in older old age, even when average lifetime benefits remain the same. The response, as we anticipated, was often negative. Interestingly, it often misrepresented or ignored what we said.
The one type of response to which we are quite sympathetic comes from those who lose the capacity to work or work at their current job or face age discrimination. We will try to address this issue more fully in another column, as it deserves more extensive treatment. For now, just recognize that continually increasing benefits for everyone does not target this population. We invite you to come to your own conclusions on how you would allocate future government resources and tax burdens among different generations. This isn’t generational warfare. All budgets allocate benefits and burdens one way or the other. It’s helpful to have some criteria for making that decision. Please recommend the column to others. Less importantly, if you’re a free subscriber, you can upgrade to paid. |