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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 12:08 AM Feb 2013

It turns out nearly all Americans love Social Security

Don't allow Congress to impose the chained CPI--which is like compound interest only in reverse. Instead of getting richer over time you get poorer.

http://washingtonpolicywatch.org/2013/02/01/it-turns-out-nearly-all-americans-love-social-security/

At a time when people are increasingly worried about retirement – both their own and the retirement of their parents and grandparents – a new poll shows the vast majority of Americans support higher taxes to increase Social Security benefits.

As we (and others) have been saying for years, Social Security’s problem is small and very manageable. If all Americans paid the same Social Security tax rate, the system would be financially sound for generations to come. But this year, Social Security taxes will only be levied on the first $113,700 of earnings – that’s “the cap” – and people earning over it don’t pay in on those earnings. Scrapping the cap would ensure all Americans contribute their fair share to Social Security, and preserve it for future generations.

<snip>

Some find it surprising that so many people are willing to sacrifice a bit more to ensure Social Security will be there for their parents, children, and themselves – but perhaps they shouldn’t. Just 14% of Americans report having enough money to live comfortably in retirement, and barely 2 in 5 private-sector workers between 25 and 64 have a employer-sponsored retirement plan of any sort.

Of course, not ALL Americans love Social Security. Remember that the Business Roundtable, representing 200 of America’s most influential and wealthy CEOs, proposed a plan to raise the retirement age to 70 and cut benefits via the chained CPI.

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It turns out nearly all Americans love Social Security (Original Post) eridani Feb 2013 OP
chained cpi to -- like preserving the flag by removing a stripe and a couple of stars. unblock Feb 2013 #1
K&R woo me with science Feb 2013 #2
K&R nt Mnemosyne Feb 2013 #3
social security bigapple1963 Feb 2013 #4
Using the general fund makes it welfare, which will quickly get it destroyed eridani Feb 2013 #5
This burns my ass. Don't people who make under 113,000 a year work just as hard for their money DogPawsBiscuitsNGrav Feb 2013 #6
kick woo me with science Feb 2013 #7
 

bigapple1963

(111 posts)
4. social security
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 01:21 AM
Feb 2013

has always had a cap. Not sure why this article acts so surprised.

But what's the "fair share" when contributing to social security? Is it fair to remove the cap on social security when benefits are capped? Is it supposed to be a wealth transfer mechanism from the rich to the poor? From the young to the old? From the working to the retirees? If you want to remove the link between contributions and benefits, why not just fund it out of the general fund?


eridani

(51,907 posts)
5. Using the general fund makes it welfare, which will quickly get it destroyed
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 03:08 AM
Feb 2013

Benefits need not be capped--just have them go up a lot more slowly at the top end instead of having a cutoff.

 
6. This burns my ass. Don't people who make under 113,000 a year work just as hard for their money
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 03:33 AM
Feb 2013

as people who make over that? We have a Dem in the White house! How is this even on the table!!! Who's representing us?!? This is insanity.

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