Social Security promise not kept at
cost of $1.8 trillion
By David Cay Johnston
New York Times, 2/29/04
A historical element was forgotten in the rush of news surrounding
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan's opinion voiced last week that
Social Security benefits are going to have to be cut. It dates back
21years to events that catapulted Greenspan into national prominence and
led to his becoming Fed chairman.
Since 1983, American workers have been paying more into Social Security
than it has paid out in benefits, about $1.8 trillion more, so far. This
year Americans will pay about 50 percent more in Social Security taxes
than the government will pay out in benefits. Those higher taxes were
imposed at the urging of Greenspan, who was chairman of a bipartisan
commission that in 1983 said that one way to make sure Social Security
remains solvent once the baby boomers reached retirement age was to tax
them in advance.
On Greenspan's recommendation, Social Security was converted from a
pay-as-you-go system to one in which taxes are collected in advance.
After Congress adopted the plan, Greenspan rose to become chairman of the
Fed.
So what has happened to that $1.8 trillion? The advance payments have all
been spent.
Congress did not lock away the Social Security surplus, as many Americans
believe. Instead, it borrowed the surplus, replacing the cash with
Treasury notes, and spent the loan proceeds paying the ordinary expenses
of running the federal government.
Only twice, in 1999 and 2000, has Congress balanced the federal budget
without borrowing from the surplus.