Originally posted by Kuciwalker
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What is greatest contributor to our deficit?
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Originally posted by Kuciwalker View PostCan you rephrase this? I'm not sure what you are trying to say.
But you seem to imply that 'redistributing' present income with poor Chinese workers will not allow you to compensate current SS costs with future gains.
It appears to me that you are supposing neoliberal free trade is a necessity.In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.
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Originally posted by gribbler View PostHow are we defining poor? I'm guessing most of the elderly are not going to have that much income. Unless you want the money given to old people to be based on the total assets they own, and give less to people who have accumulated more....?
Allowing people to collect the returns of their investments is socially useful, because it creates the incentive to invest. But by and large, the Boomers did not invest the money they "saved" through their payroll taxes. There is little value in guaranteeing the returns they promised themselves.
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Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostI'm not sure if I understand your points anyway.
But you seem to imply that 'redistributing' present income with poor Chinese workers will not allow you to compensate current SS costs with future gains.
It appears to me that you are supposing neoliberal free trade is a necessity.
Even though society as a whole can't shift consumption in time, though, individuals can "invest" by lending money to other people, to be spent on current consumption, in return for the promise that those other people will give them even more money back in the future. This does not change the total production or consumption of society at either point in time. (It may still be socially useful, e.g. if a farmer who had a good year lends food to a farmer who had a bad year, so that neither starves.)
This brings us back to the US government. Government debt, when used to finance productive investments like roads, represents "real" savings. But the majority of government spending is not on investment, but on transfer payments - either explicit cash transfers, or 'in kind' transfers such as medical treatment. These also may be socially useful, but they aren't investment and don't increase future production or consumption. The bonds used to finance those transfer payments represent claims on nonexistent resources - the goods purchased with them have already been consumed. The Social Security Trust Fund is nominally separate from the general fund, and represents Americans' savings to pay for their social security benefits (savings through the payroll tax). But the fund is invested entirely in this US debt, which is a claim on the resources that we already consumed. The claims on the Trust Fund (that is, retirees' claims to their social security benefits) are entirely just claims that future taxpayers will give them money for nothing in return.
By itself, this arrangement isn't necessarily incorrect - this sort of intergenerational transfer could be socially optimal. But it does subvert the idea that the previous generation is morally entitled to their benefits because they paid into the fund their entire lives - the fund was just a vehicle for redistributing goods between themselves.
Where do the Chinese come into this? Well, in the real world, the US is not an isolated nation, and our government debt is partially financed by foreigners. If the Chinese government buys a bunch of 30-year US Treasury bonds, the net redistribution now involves four different parties. First, current Chinese (who are overwhelmingly poor) are giving goods to current Americans (who are overwhelmingly rich). In return, future Americans (who will, hopefully, be rich) will give goods to future Chinese (who will probably be less poor). It is not clear at all that this redistribution is socially optimal.
I'm not "supposing neoliberal free trade is a necessity"; I'm making the observation that the Chinese actually have bought over a trillion dollars of US government debt. IOW, not only have the Boomers "saved" for their retirement by giving themselves their own stuff and claiming it as a debt (to be paid by future taxpayers), they've taken stuff from other countries in return for the promise that future taxpayers will pay for it.
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