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Clinton's Social Security reform would rob teachers, ministers, and cops.

President Bill Clinton's recently announced plan to "save" Social Security contains a little-noticed provision that will wreck the retirement plans of millions of public school teachers, ministers, and rabbis.

"It's our worst nightmare," Bob Shreve Bob Shreve (1912–1990) was a first-generation television broadcasting personality based in Cincinnati, Ohio. Described by Cincinnati television producer Len Goorian as "the closest thing I've ever seen to a living leprechaun," the Plymouth, Indiana-born Robert Gerald Shreve , a retired Ohio school teacher, told the Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
. Shreve is one of more than 5 million state and local government employees now exempt from Social Security. Another 100,000 clergy are also exempt. Unlike more than 90 percent of American workers, they pay no FICA FICA
abbr.
Federal Insurance Contributions Act

Noun 1. FICA - a tax on employees and employers that is used to fund the Social Security system
income tax - a personal tax levied on annual income

 taxes. Instead, they pay into private retirement accounts that are generally superior to Social Security.

But Clinton is about to change Shreve's life. The president has teamed up with Sen. John Breaux John Berlinger Breaux (last name pronounced BRO) is a former United States senator from Louisiana who served from 1987 until 2005. He was also a member of the U.S. House from 1972 to 1987. He was considered one of the more conservative national legislators from the Democratic Party.  (D-La.), the ranking member In United States politics, the ranking member or ranking minority member is a member of a congressional committee from the minority party, frequently the member with the highest seniority.  on the Senate's Special Committee on Aging, to force all exempt employees into Social Security.

This is the closest Washington will come to grappling with Social Security reform in the next two years. The Social Security reform debate may rage on in policy think tanks, but Congress wants to avoid any contentious debates until after the 2000 elections. Clinton cannot consider genuine reform; he is too beholden be·hold·en  
adj.
Owing something, such as gratitude, to another; indebted.



[Middle English biholden, past participle of biholden, to observe; see behold.
 to the labor unions labor union: see union, labor.  and liberal interest groups that supported him during his scandals. But a Social Security shortfall looms, and the president wants to be seen as doing something even as he pushes the problem onto the next administration.

The usual political fixes no longer work. Old standby remedies, last employed during the 1983 crisis, involved raising the retirement age, cutting benefits, and boosting taxes. But the American Association American Association refers to one of the following professional baseball leagues:
  • American Association (19th century), active from 1882 to 1891.
  • American Association (20th century), active from 1902 to 1962 and 1969 to 1997.
 of Retired People, one of Washington's most powerful lobbying groups, opposes any increase in the retirement age or reduction in benefits, even for the handful of millionaire retirees. Raising Social Security taxes is also a nonstarter. The majority of Americans, including nearly all of those who earn less than $40,000 a year, pay more in Social Security taxes than in federal income taxes - they won't want to pay more. The president also knows that the GOP-led Congress would oppose a tax hike. The president's other Social Security brainstorm, a plan to allow the government to invest in stocks, has been blocked by vocal opposition from Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan Alan Greenspan

Dr. Greenspan is Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Dr. Greenspan also serves as Chairman of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the Fed's principal monetary policymaking body.
.

From the White House's perspective, only one option remains: Tax those who are currently exempt. That's why the White House has endorsed corralling into the system the relatively small number of people whose retirements are secure outside it. Though it could impoverish im·pov·er·ish  
tr.v. im·pov·er·ished, im·pov·er·ish·ing, im·pov·er·ish·es
1. To reduce to poverty; make poor.

2.
 teachers and clergymen - and "save" Social Security for only another two years - this approach lets the president claim that he is "reforming" Social Security.

When David Vienna, a lobbyist for the exempt workers and retirees, confronted White House officials about the plan in January 1999, they offered two justifications. First, they contended, it is a matter of simple fairness that coverage should be universal. Second, Vienna says, they told him, "We need the money." Both of these arguments are flawed.

The fairness and universal coverage argument turns on a typically Clintonian definition of the words fair and universal. Low earners pay less into the system than they receive in retirement checks, a fact trumpeted on the government's Social Security Web page. This is where "fairness" comes in: It is only fair that everyone receive a certain guaranteed minimum payment for their declining years. And here's where the "universal coverage" plays a role: For the low-earner subsidy to continue, many middle-class earners, who, on average, get back less than they pay into the system, need to be forcibly forc·i·ble  
adj.
1. Effected against resistance through the use of force: The police used forcible restraint in order to subdue the assailant.

2. Characterized by force; powerful.
 kept in it. Thus "fairness" and "universal coverage" are shorthand shorthand, any brief, rapid system of writing that may be used in transcribing, or recording, the spoken word. Such systems, many having characters based on the letters of the alphabet, were used in ancient times; the shorthand of Tiro, Cicero's amanuensis, was used  for a New Deal-style redistribution of wealth.

The element of "fairness" in this argument is certainly open to question. But the logic seems especially hard-hearted when used to defend Clinton's Social Security plan.

Roping the exempt workers into Social Security seems unfair because they are only a few steps ahead of the low earners that the president says he wants to protect. They are solidly middle-class Americans who, ironically, vote predominantly for Democrats. Forty percent of the 5 million exempt public employees are school teachers, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the National Conference of State Legislatures
The abbreviation NCSL redirects here. For the British educational institution see National College for School Leadership.


The National Conference of State Legislatures
. The rest are local- and state-government employees in 14 states, some older federal workers, police officers, sheriff's deputies, and firefighters, as well as ministers and rabbis, says Tom Lucier, a spokesman for the Coalition to Preserve Retirement Security. Californians will be among the hardest hit: The employees of more than 280 cities and 1,000 school districts in that state are now exempt from Social Security, according to a recent study by the state pension system.

The president is trying to move such people from what is now a safe and generous retirement system to one set to go bankrupt in a few decades. Why send the lifeboats back to the Titanic Titanic (tītăn`ĭk), British liner that sank on the night of Apr. 14–15, 1912, after crashing into an iceberg in the N Atlantic S of Newfoundland. More than 1,500 lives were lost. ? The average wage earner can expect Social Security to replace only about 42.4 percent of his pre-retirement income, according to the House Ways and Means WAYS AND MEANS. In legislative assemblies there is usually appointed a committee whose duties are to inquire into, and propose to the house, the ways and means to be adopted to raise funds for the use of the government. This body is called the committee of ways and means.  Committee's 1994 Green Book: Overview of Entitlement Programs. Though the plans vary widely, most exempt employees will receive about two-thirds of their pre-retirement income in pension checks - a much better deal than Social Security. In some cases, the gap between the return offered by Social Security and exempt pension plans is even wider.

Why do the exempt plans provide so much more? First, the pension money is actually invested in the safe end of the stock market, which grows at an average of 6 percent to 8 percent a year, instead of being spent by the government in exchange for the promise of a check in the future. (The idea that the stock market is risky for long-term investors Long-term investor

A person who makes investments for a period of at least five years in order to finance his or her long-term goals.
 is false; over any 15-year period in American history - including from the crash of 1929 to the war year of 1944 - the stock market has always produced positive returns, according to Ibbotson Associates, a Chicago-based investment consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
consulting company

business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a
.)

Second, pension fund managers are directly accountable for the success of their investments and issue quarterly reports. If exempt workers find the investments too risky, or even too safe, they can switch funds - a choice obviously not offered by the federal government. Another advantage for the exempt plans: The plans tend to provide more generous disability and survivors' benefits. Small wonder that a 1997 study by the nonprofit group Third Millennium, titled Freed from FICA, concluded that exempt employees are better off outside of the Social Security system.

Clinton's plan to make currently exempt employees pay FICA taxes will seriously weaken the financial health of the exempt plans. Forcing new state employees to join Social Security will mean large reductions in the benefits already promised to current and future exempt retirees, according to a study conducted for the State Teachers' Retirement System of Ohio. Buckeye buckeye: see horse chestnut.
buckeye

Any of about 13 trees and shrubs of the genus Aesculus (family Hippocastanaceae), native to North America, southeastern Europe, and eastern Asia.
 State employees pay 9.3 percent of their salaries into the state retirement plan. The state contributes another 14 percent, for a total contribution of 23.3 percent of the employee's salary. These contributions pay for a broader range of retirement benefits than does Social Security, including retirement income, disability benefits, survivors' benefits, and an old-age health care fund. If the Clinton-Breaux plan is adopted, more than half of those contributions - 12.4 percent of each employee's income - will be diverted from pension plans to Social Security payroll taxes Payroll Tax

Tax an employer withholds and/or pays on behalf of their employees based on the wage or salary of the employee. In most countries, including the U.S., both state and federal authorities collect some form of payroll tax.
. One of the most popular features of the Ohio plan, retiree health insurance provided to all-recipients regardless of age, could be bankrupted, forcing retirees to rely on Medicare alone. "The money has got to come from somewhere, and a lot of municipalities are already taxed to the limit," said Bob Scully, who heads the 220,000-member National Association of Police Organizations. "If this passes, it is going to affect benefits."

It is easy to see why Scully is upset. Some 75 percent of the country's police, firefighters, and other public safety employees are currently exempt from Social Security. Their plans are tailored to meet the special needs of their stressful and often dangerous professions, providing early retirement benefits and more generous death and disability benefits. By contrast, Social Security will pay disability compensation only when an individual is completely incapable of working at any job - and, even then, the benefits are miserly mi·ser·ly  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of a miser; avaricious or penurious.



miser·li·ness n.

Adj. 1.
 by comparison. An injured in·jure  
tr.v. in·jured, in·jur·ing, in·jures
1. To cause physical harm to; hurt.

2. To cause damage to; impair.

3.
 Ohio firefighter who works part-time at a desk would receive 60 percent of his former salary under his exempt plan - but nothing from Social Security. If he dies, his wife and children can expect to receive a lump sum Lump sum

A large one-time payment of money.
 equal to at least one year of his salary. By contrast, Social Security would provide a single, one-time $255 payment - not even enough to pay for a no-frills funeral. It doesn't sound very fair at all.

What about the claim that the federal government needs the money to shore up Social Security? The Clinton-Breaux plan raises $11.3 billion over five years, according to the Congressional Budget Office The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is responsible for economic forecasting and fiscal policy analysis, scorekeeeping, cost projections, and an Annual Report on the Federal Budget. The office also underdakes special budget-related studies at the request of Congress. . That is almost enough to buy two more years of solvency; putting off the day of reckoning from 2030 to 2032, by one estimate. Even on its own terms, this doesn't seem like a good deal. Why increase Social Security's liability by 5 million new beneficiaries for such a relatively small gain? And it is fair to ask, What do they need the money for? After all, the current budget surplus is entirely the result of a Social Security tax surplus. In the short run, the system has more money than it needs to pay current beneficiaries. But the president wants to spend the surplus - and the funds raised by taxing exempt employees - on an array of new proposals.

There are other flaws to the Clinton-Breaux plan. Some state constitutions mandate that all promised state benefit obligations be honored, regardless of the financial burden imposed upon the state; in such cases, new taxes will have to be levied to honor these obligations. The Clinton-Breaux plan is both a back-door tax increase and the kind of "unfunded mandate An unfunded mandate is a statute that requires government or private parties to carry out specific actions, but does not appropriate any funds for that purpose. Examples
" the GOP once swore to oppose.

The Clinton-Breaux plan also violates the original promise of the Social Security system and does so in a way that should make us suspicious of any government claims about the system's future. When the Roosevelt administration There have been two Presidents of the United States with the surname "Roosevelt":
  • Theodore Roosevelt Administration, the 26th President of the United States, 1901 - 1909.
and his younger distant cousin
  • Franklin D.
 dreamed up Social Security in 1935, the stated goal was to guarantee that industrial workers would have secure pensions. With the Great Depression threatening the life of so many enterprises, it seemed like a good idea to provide these workers with an independent, guaranteed retirement plan. Public employees were specifically excluded because Congress recognized that they were already safe from the swing of private sector fortunes.

Then President Roosevelt made a promise that revealed his administration's redistributionist aims. FDR allowed workers who retired after 1936 - no matter how little they paid in - to collect full benefits immediately. That meant that the system had to expand to cover the costs of these unfunded liabilities. Small-business owners, farmers, doctors, and others who traditionally funded their own retirements were gradually forced into the system. Today, more than 148 million workers pay into a system that was just supposed to protect the working poor from poverty in old age.

After most private sector workers were absorbed, the federal government targeted other government workers - even though their retirements were secure. In 1954 Congress amended the Social Security Act to let states and municipalities voluntarily cover their public employees under Social Security. Some opted in, others stayed outside the system. This voluntary agreement was revoked in 1983, when Congress made it illegal for states and municipalities to continue to set up alternative retirement plans for their employees; only pension plans pre-dating the 1983 amendments were allowed to enroll new employees.

At the same time, all new federal employees were forced into Social Security. (Congress maintained that the 1983 amendments would ensure Social Security's solvency for at least another 75 years; a mere 16 years later, Social Security is again facing bankruptcy.) In 1990, the Social Security Act was amended again to force any public employee not already enrolled in an exempt plan into the system. Clinton proposes to close this last loophole An omission or Ambiguity in a legal document that allows the intent of the document to be evaded.

Loopholes come into being through the passage of statutes, the enactment of regulations, the drafting of contracts or the decisions of courts.
, forcing the last handful of exempt workers into the Social Security system.

Soon there will be more people receiving Social Security checks than there are paying into the system. By the time the baby boom generation retires, the imbalance between payers and payees will probably be too great to sustain. That's why a Third Millennium poll shows that Americans aged 18 to 25 believe they are more likely to see a flying saucer flying saucer: see unidentified flying objects.  than a dime from Social Security.

There is a better way: Let those whose retirements are already assured stay outside the system. Clinton and Congress should find a real fix for Social Security, one that doesn't ruin the retirements of teachers, clergy, and police officers.

Richard Miniter This article or section is written like an .
Please help [ rewrite this article] from a neutral point of view.
Mark blatant advertising for , using .
 (rminiter@aol.com) is a Washington, D.C., writer whose work appears in The Wall Street Journal, Reader's Digest Reader's Digest

U.S.-based monthly magazine. Founded by DeWitt and Lila Wallace, it was first published in 1922 as a digest of articles of topical interest and entertainment value condensed from other periodicals.
, The Atlantic Monthly, and other publications. He is a visiting fellow at the Lexington Institute, an Arlington, Virginia-based free market think tank.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Reason Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:requiring exempted teachers and the clergy to make contributions to Social Security
Author:Miniter, Richard
Publication:Reason
Date:Aug 1, 1999
Words:2185
Previous Article:Dead air.
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