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the cato institute explains why young people should be pissed off

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  • the cato institute explains why young people should be pissed off



    When Social Security was founded, offering a federal pension at age 65, most of the people born 65 years earlier couldn't take advantage of it. They were dead. For the lucky ones who lived long enough to collect, the new pension system, founded in 1935, was meant as a modest support in the brief span before they passed on to glory. No more. Since then, life expectancy at birth in America has increased to more than 77 years. For the majority of people, that means lots of time being supported by the government. A working life is now just a tedious interregnum between two long periods of comfortable dependence.

    America's elderly have never had it so good. They enjoy better health than any previous generation of old people, high incomes and ample assets, access to a host of medical treatments that not only keep them alive but let them enjoy their extra years, and a riotous multitude of ways to spoil their grandchildren. Still they are not content. From gratefully accepting a basic level of assistance back in the early decades of Social Security, America's elderly have come to expect everything their durable little hearts desire.

    They often get their way, as they did recently when years of complaints finally induced Congress and the president to agree to bear much of the cost of their prescription drugs. From the tenor of the debate, you would think these medications were a terrible burden inflicted by an uncaring fate. In fact, past generations of old people didn't have to make room in their budgets for pharmaceuticals because there weren't many to buy. If you suffered from high cholesterol, chronic heartburn, or depression, you were left to primitive remedies, or none. Today, there are pills and potions for just about any complaint—except the chronic complaint that many of them are pricey. It's not enough to be blessed with medical miracles. Modern seniors also want them cheap, if not free.

    That's on top of everything else they get. Retirement benefits used to be just one of the federal government's many maternal functions. But in recent years, the federal government has begun to look like an appendage of Social Security. In 2000, 35 percent of all federal spending dollars went to Social Security and Medicare. By 2040, barring an increase in total federal outlays, they'll account for more than 60 percent of the budget. And that's before you add in the prescription drug benefit. Most of the projected growth is due to rising health-care costs, not to the aging of the population, according to the Congressional Budget Office [1]. Retirees eyeing this bounty feel no pangs of guilt, thanks to their unshakable conviction that they earned every dime by sweat and toil. In fact, economists Laurence Kotlikoff and Jagadeesh Gokhale say that a typical man reaching age 65 today will get a net windfall of more than $70,000 over his remaining years. A luckless 25-year-old, by contrast, can count on paying $322,000 [2] more in payroll taxes than he will ever get back in benefits.

    Why do we keep indulging the grizzled ones? The most obvious reason is that they are so tireless and well-organized in demanding alms. No politician ever lost an election because he was too generous to little old ladies. A lot of people are suckered by the image of financially strapped seniors, even though the poverty rate among those 65 and over has been lower than that for the population as a whole since 1974. But it's not just the interests of old coots that are being served here. Young and middle-aged adults tend to look kindly upon lavish federal generosity to Grandma because it means she won't be hitting them up for help. Paying taxes may be onerous, but it's nothing compared to the cost, financial and otherwise, of adding a mother-in-law suite to the house. Working-age folks also assume that whatever they bestow upon today's seniors will be likewise bestowed on them, and in the not too distant future. It's not really fair to blame the greatest generation for this extravagance. They are guilty, but they have an accomplice.

    It's surely no coincidence that the new drug benefit is being enacted just as the first baby boomers are nearing retirement age. Nor can it be forgotten that the organization formerly known as the American Association of Retired People—it's now just AARP—has lately broadened its membership to include all the boomers it can get its wrinkled hands on. AARP, to the surprise of many, endorsed the plan. And what a surprise it is that the prescription drug program, which will cost some $400 billion over the next 10 years, could balloon to $2 trillion in the 10 years following that—when guess-who will be collecting. You would expect taxpayers in their peak earning years to recoil in horror from a program that will vastly increase Washington's fiscal obligations for decades to come. In fact, they—make that we—can see that the time to lock in a prosperous old age is now, before twentysomethings know what's hit them.

    Boomers have gotten our way every since we arrived in this world, and the onset of gray hair, bifocals, and arthritis is not going to moderate our unswerving self-indulgence. We are the same people, after all, who forced the lowering of the drinking age when we were young, so we could drink, and forced it back up when we got older, so our kids couldn't. On top of that, we're used to the best of everything, and plenty of it. We weren't dubbed the Me Generation because we neglect our own needs, Junior. If politicians think the current geezers are greedy, they ain't seen nothin' yet.

    But responsible middle-aged sorts may yet be brought to their senses when they realize that their usual impulse to get all they can will sooner or later collide with another boomer obsession: the insatiable desire to furnish our kids with every advantage known to humanity. Load Social Security with more obligations than it can bear, and our precious offspring will be squashed under the weight. To fund all the obligations of the Social Security system, payroll taxes will have to more than double by 2040—on top of whatever it costs to buy all those prescription drugs. At that point, our children will realize the trick we've pulled and start to hate our guts. That would be a cruel blow to a generation that thinks of itself as the most wonderful parents in history.

    To avoid that fate, boomers need to recognize the need to stop writing checks that today's youngsters will have to cash. With the eager help of our own parents, we've created an entitlement that is fast becoming unaffordable. To bring Social Security into conformity with reality, we'll have to resign ourselves to a higher retirement age reflecting our prospective vigor and life expectancy. We'll have to accept more stringent controls on Medicare spending and take more responsibility for our own medical needs. We'll have to abandon our assumption that the point of the health-care system is to keep each of us alive forever. At some point—don't worry, not anytime soon—we will have to embrace a duty to stop functioning as a fiscal burden on our children and start serving as a nutritional resource for worms.


    [1] = congressional budget office report
    [2] = cato institute report

    this slate report pretty much is saying things i've feared for a long while.




    edit: link [2] corrected.
    Last edited by Q Classic; December 11, 2003, 10:52.
    B♭3

  • #2
    You're selfish

    Comment


    • #3
      well, duh. when do you people retire?
      urgh.NSFW

      Comment


      • #4
        SLAUGHTER THEM AND EAT THEIR FLESH!
        "Spirit merges with matter to sanctify the universe. Matter transcends to return to spirit. The interchangeability of matter and spirit means the starlit magic of the outermost life of our universe becomes the soul-light magic of the innermost life of our self." - Dennis Kucinich, candidate for the U. S. presidency
        "That’s the future of the Democratic Party: providing Republicans with a number of cute (but not that bright) comfort women." - Adam Yoshida, Canada's gift to the world

        Comment


        • #5
          Time to start throwing some old people out of helicopters...
          "Perhaps a new spirit is rising among us. If it is, let us trace its movements and pray that our own inner being may be sensitive to its guidance, for we are deeply in need of a new way beyond the darkness that seems so close around us." --MLK Jr.

          Comment


          • #6
            Hmmmm, I'm still 16 years from 65 and I've already paid in excess of $100,000 in SS and Medicare taxes. With any type of reasonable interest over the 20+ years, it would be worth over 250,000. Now think what that's going to be worth in 16 years, on top of the 80,000 I will have to contribute getting to 65 asuming no further increases.

            Total it up and consider what I will probably get in return. I wouldn't consider that greed. I'd call it a ripoff.
            It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
            RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O

            Comment


            • #7
              Amazingly, the report jives perfectly with the cato institutes ideology...
              I'm consitently stupid- Japher
              I think that opinion in the United States is decidedly different from the rest of the world because we have a free press -- by free, I mean a virgorously presented right wing point of view on the air and available to all.- Ned

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by rah
                Hmmmm, I'm still 16 years from 65 and I've already paid in excess of $100,000 in SS and Medicare taxes. With any type of reasonable interest over the 20+ years, it would be worth over 250,000. Now think what that's going to be worth in 16 years, on top of the 80,000 I will have to contribute getting to 65 asuming no further increases.

                Total it up and consider what I will probably get in return. I wouldn't consider that greed. I'd call it a ripoff.


                Yes... a BIG RIPOFF!

                If I had taken the money I paid into SS, and invested it... by the time I retire, I would be able to retire in luxery, and could afford my own medical costs. But no, all I'll see from the government is measily little checks that you can't really live on, and "marginal help" on medical bills... no bargin here.
                Keep on Civin'
                RIP rah, Tony Bogey & Baron O

                Comment


                • #9
                  of course not. which is why SS is a bad idea(tm).

                  to be facetious:
                  there's a reason why it shares the same initials as the SS.

                  i don't want to pay taxes on this **** at all.
                  B♭3

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    You're selfish

                    of course i am. if i weren't, and if everyone else weren't. the capitalist system would never work.

                    i'd much rather take care of my own mom than trust the government to do its bang up job.
                    B♭3

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      SLAUGHTER THEM AND EAT THEIR FLESH!

                      old people meat would be too tough and stringy, i'd wager, unless they've never really exercised, in which case they might be more like kobe beef.
                      B♭3

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Well, despite it being a rip off, I do feel some obligation to support the workers that are now old and in need of help.

                        But to call it greed just because I expect the same for when I get that age. is ludicrous. And to label all the boomers (which I am one) as greedy is equally ludicrous. We HAVE paid our share, in general. We are not asking for a free hand out. Just a partial return on what we've paid.
                        It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
                        RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          i know you've paid your share. what irritates me is that i'll have paid my share, and then some, and will eventually be told: "hehe, go on and **** yourself, 'cause we ain't got nuttin' left."
                          B♭3

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            In all honesty, I'm expecting the same treatment.
                            It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
                            RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Actually the baby boomers have not paid their share really.

                              Pay-as-you-go pension systems like the US's social security only work, long-term, if the workforce continues to expand.

                              As the baby boomers have not had enough children (and in doing so saved themselves the expense of rearing them) to make the system viable in the future then I would say that they bear part of the blame for it's ultimate failure (although the rise in life expectancy doesn't help)
                              19th Century Liberal, 21st Century European

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