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EE_
22nd November 2012, 11:33 PM
Truth about raising Social Security retirement age

video after the stinking 32 second commercial
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45755883/ns/msnbc-the_last_word/#49911791

Why rich guys want to raise the retirement age
Posted by Ezra Klein on November 21, 2012 at 2:14 pm

If you’re the CEO of Goldman Sachs – if you have a job that you love, a job that makes you so much money you can literally build a Scrooge McDuck room where you can swim through a pile of gold coins wearing only a topcoat – then you should perhaps think twice before saying this:

You can look at the history of these things, and Social Security wasn’t devised to be a system that supported you for a 30-year retirement after a 25-year career. … So there will be things that, you know, the retirement age has to be changed. Maybe some of the benefits have to be affected, maybe some of the inflation adjustments have to be revised. But in general, entitlements have to be slowed down and contained.

That’s Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs, talking to CBS. And he’s not saying anything that people, particularly wealthier people with desk jobs, don’t say all the time in Washington and New York. So I don’t want to just pick on him. But the cavalier endorsement of raising the retirement age by people who really love their jobs, who make so much money they barely pay Social Security taxes, and who are, actuarially speaking, are ensured a long and healthy life, drives me nuts.

If you want talk about cutting Social Security, talk about cutting it. It’s a reasonable point of view. You’re allowed to hold it.

But “cutting” Social Security is unpopular and people don’t like to talk about it. So folks who want to cut the program have instead settled on an elliptical argument about life expectancy. Social Security, they say, was designed at a time when Americans didn’t live quite so long. And so raising the retirement age isn’t a “cut.” It’s a restoration of the program’s original purpose. It doesn’t hurt anything or anyone.

The first point worth making here is that the country’s economy has grown 15-fold since Social Security was passed into law. One of the things the richest society the world has ever known can buy is a decent retirement for people who don’t have jobs they love and who don’t want to work forever.

The second point worth making is that Social Security was overhauled in the ’80s. So the promises the program is carrying out today were made then. And, since the ’80s, the idea that we’ve all gained so many years of life simply isn’t true.

Some of us have gained in life expectancy, of course. As you can see on this graph, since 1977, the life expectancy of male workers retiring at age 65 has risen six years in the top half of the income distribution. But if you’re in the bottom half of the income distribution? Then you’ve only gained 1.3 years.

If you’re wealthy, you do have many more years to enjoy Social Security. But if you’re not, you don’t. And so making it so people who aren’t wealthy have to wait longer to use Social Security is a particularly cruel and regressive way to cut the program.

It’s also a cut that’s particularly tough on people who spend their lives in jobs they don’t enjoy.

You know what age most people actually begin taking Social Security? Sixty-five is what most people think. That’s the law’s standard retirement age. But that’s wrong. Most people begin taking Social Security benefits at 62, which is as early as the law allows you to take them.

When they do that, it means they get smaller benefits over their lifetime. We penalize for taking it early. But they do it anyway. They do it because they don’t want to spend their whole lives at that job. Unlike many folks in finance or in the U.S. Senate or writing for the nation’s op-ed pages, they don’t want to work till they drop.

As Peter Diamond, the Nobel laureate economist and Social Security expert, told Dylan Matthews:

What do we know about the people who retire at 62? On average, shorter life expectancy and lower earnings than people retiring at later ages. If anyone stood up and said, “Instead of doing uniform across the board cuts, let’s make them a little worse for people who have shorter life expectancies and lower earnings,” they’d be laughed at. Anything that reduces benefits is going to hurt everybody. It’s going to hit people with short life expectancies, it’s going to hit people with high life expectancies. But we should not make it worse for those retiring earliest.

That’s what’s galling about this easy argument. The people who make it, the pundits and the senators and the CEOs, they’ll never feel it. They don’t want to retire at age 65, and they don’t have short life expectancies, and they’re not mainly relying on Social Security for their retirement income. They’re bravely advocating a cut they’ll never feel.

But you know what they would feel? Social Security taxes don’t apply to income over $110,000. In 2011, Lloyd Blankfein’s total compensation was $16.1 million. That means he paid Social Security taxes on less than 1 percent of his compensation.

If we lifted that cap, if we made all income subject to payroll taxes, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that it would do three times as much to solve Social Security’s shortfall as raising the retirement age to 70. In fact, it would, in one fell swoop, close Social Security’s solvency gap for the next 75 years. That may or may not be the right way to close Social Security’s shortfall, but somehow, it rarely gets mentioned by the folks who think they’re being courageous when they talk about raising a retirement age they’ll never notice.

Again, I don’t mean to pick on Blankfein here. He’s not saying anything unusual, and he’s one of the CEOs who’s pretty straightforward about the fact that his taxes are going to need to go up. But he and all these folks who like to talk about raising the Social Security retirement age as if it’s a no-brainer need to think harder about why they’ve settled on the cut to Social Security that will concentrate its pain on people who haven’t fully shared in the remarkable increase in life expectancy, who don’t make much money and who don’t love going to their jobs every day.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2012/11/21/why-rich-guys-want-to-raise-the-retirement-age/?tid=pm_business_pop

Ponce
23rd November 2012, 12:20 AM
If you wait till you are sixty five to start collecting that means that you would break even at the age of seventy eight... how many lives to be seventy eight?.......my X and her friend will start collecting in January, is like I explained to her "Now days it is important to get into the system as soon as possible"......I for one already collected about five times what I put into it so that I have no complains......they will not cut off Social Security.

Horn
23rd November 2012, 12:53 AM
After the reduced hour work week, and layoffs due to Obamacare

50% of the nation will be on part time or unemployed for the next fifteen years,

they will probably want to work the last five years of their life.

palani
23rd November 2012, 05:31 AM
I for one already collected about five times what I put into it so that I have no complains......they will not cut off Social Security.

Social Security was implemented to control my generation (boomer here). Its action is to work evils that people don't comprehend or can't rationalize. Go back to all of your complaints about ANYTHING during the past 6 months and realize that the root cause is Social Security. Everything you have written about Jewish control can come down to your acceptance of welfare from the state. This is the ring you place in your own nose to allow a leash to lead you to wherever the financial guru's would like you to go.

osoab
23rd November 2012, 08:14 AM
A jew Ezra Klein bashing another jew Lloyd Blankfein. Nice distraction.

mamboni
23rd November 2012, 10:23 AM
Social Security is immoral theft of property by the state from the individual on the altar of "good intentions" (i.e. to help widows and orphans). In order to sell the fraud and keep it going, it morphed into a pension for the working man. In reality, it was a Ponzi scheme from it's inception, a mechanism for the government to skim off the collective labors of the people. The program should be terminated: it's a fraud and a lie. And historically, the vast majority of folk had to work their entire lives - there was no such thing as retirment unless you were one of the lucky few born into wealth and privilege. Some things never change, huh?

mick silver
23rd November 2012, 10:25 AM
but it nice how they all can retire after 4 years in dc on all of our backs

Ponce
23rd November 2012, 10:31 AM
Palani?....... I always have a plan behind my pland and I can survive without my SS......if the government had not stolen our money from SS there now would be all what is needed for the next 100 years......beside, is not what you have but what you do with it.

mamboni
23rd November 2012, 10:47 AM
but it nice how they all can retire after 4 years in dc on all of our backs

Yeah, "it's good to be the king!"

Ponce
23rd November 2012, 10:51 AM
Ponce <--------- mini-me-king, it took me six years....... but only because I gave the people what they needed and wanted.

Horn
23rd November 2012, 11:01 AM
And historically, the vast majority of folk had to work their entire lives - there was no such thing as retirement unless you were one of the lucky few born into wealth and privilege. Some things never change, huh?

Which brings me to a fella I once knew who's family owned & operated Billboards on the highway. Boy was I jealous, his entire life was retirement on a cheesy bachelor business degree.

I'm all for no form of retirement or pension, as I believe it creates those living their life to rely on their own goodness to survive in the end. but alas I also have to live in this world seeing utility workers work for eight years & have the option.

Uncle Salty
23rd November 2012, 12:34 PM
SS should be an opt-in option for the retards that can't save and know they will need to suck off the teat of the state in their retirement.

Ponce
23rd November 2012, 01:23 PM
That's why I live only on my SS, so that I can hold on to what I have saved..... plan ahead and you wont be sorry ahead.

mamboni
23rd November 2012, 01:41 PM
SS should be an opt-in option for the retards that can't save and know they will need to suck off the teat of the state in their retirement.

Well, that's 51% of the population and they justed volunteered the other 49%. After all, a Ponzi can't work without enough suckers to feed off of.

midnight rambler
23rd November 2012, 02:35 PM
Well, that's 51% of the population and they justed volunteered the other 49%. After all, a Ponzi can't work without enough suckers to feed off of.

And a very fine example of democracy at that.

Uncle Salty
23rd November 2012, 04:44 PM
Well, that's 51% of the population and they justed volunteered the other 49%. After all, a Ponzi can't work without enough suckers to feed off of.

SS was the result of the US rolling over their bankruptcy and getting people into the system was a way to further tether the US population the creditors of the US government. Creditors make the rules and the Rothschilds are the creditors. It's been going on for a long long time.

madfranks
23rd November 2012, 06:15 PM
Social Security is immoral theft of property by the state from the individual on the altar of "good intentions" (i.e. to help widows and orphans). In order to sell the fraud and keep it going, it morphed into a pension for the working man. In reality, it was a Ponzi scheme from it's inception, a mechanism for the government to skim off the collective labors of the people. The program should be terminated: it's a fraud and a lie. And historically, the vast majority of folk had to work their entire lives - there was no such thing as retirment unless you were one of the lucky few born into wealth and privilege. Some things never change, huh?

You must have missed this part - "One of the things the richest society the world has ever known can buy is a decent retirement for people who don’t have jobs they love and who don’t want to work"

Serpo
23rd November 2012, 09:27 PM
So now America is down to the 29 hr work week........

mamboni
23rd November 2012, 09:38 PM
You must have missed this part - "One of the things the richest society the world has ever known can buy is a decent retirement for people who don’t have jobs they love and who don’t want to work"

Oh, OK, there it is again, the "richest society in the world" canard once again. Which society is the author describing, the United States? By his logic, the guy with the greatest number of maxed out credit cards, no savings, and lots of depreciating gadgets he doesn't need, sitting in a depreciating mortgaged home, with large negative net worth, is the richest guy in the neighborhood; certainly, he is richer than the guy who lives modestly in a rental, has some money in the bank, sparse furnishings, no debt and a solitary charge card with zero balance. Do I have that right?

zap
23rd November 2012, 10:13 PM
My MIL and FIL were retired in the late 80"s He was a soldier and skinned airplanes during the war , she was betrothed to another and he died in combat, I guess she saved all the money he sent back home and put her new husband thru sheet metal school, he collected SS and had a pension from the Union until he died.

MIL was the one at the party, who had all the ( fake ) blinky rings, necklaces, bracelets all in a matching outfit, (whether it was purple, red, or pink.) She always said and lived by...... Save your money, she was 1 of 12 kids growing up in the 50's in a dairy business, all she every told me was SAVE YOUR MONEY, I thought it was weird how her life revolved around money, money!

She did die first and her husband came to see the govenment as we do , lucky to get a pension, ss..... in the end he fixed it all ,if you know what I mean.

D sciple
23rd November 2012, 10:34 PM
Proverbs 13

22 A good man leaves an inheritance to his children’s children,
And the wealth of the sinner is stored up for the righteous.

23 Abundant food is in the fallow ground of the poor,
But it is swept away by injustice.


Farmlots ftw (numbers 33:54)

1 Samuel 26:19 ...If, however, men have done it, may they be cursed before the LORD! They have now driven me from my share in the LORD's inheritance and have said, 'Go, serve other gods.'

Hatha Sunahara
24th November 2012, 07:13 PM
It's part of an austerity program. Raising the retirement age is just another way to make the slaves work harder and longer.

Please take notice of how many of these austerity proposals are being made. Fiscal cliff? Booga Booga. It's like watching an addict die. This one is addicted to 'buying power'. Only there's not enough money and not enough power. So you make the slaves work harder and longer. This is the longer part.


Hatha