Solving
Social Security is No Big Deal
As an investor, I've always wondered why
Social Security is such a problem. What's so difficult about managing this
particular Trust Fund, and why is it so different from other investment
accounts that pay out a constant stream of income? The private sector does it
routinely with defined benefit pension plans and fixed annuities, so what's the
big deal? Is Social Security failing because it hasn't been invested soundly,
or is there some other reason?
The most obvious explanation is politics,
but we're running out of time for finger pointing, and Social Security is
solvable in a surprisingly painless manner. It will require a whole new
approach that uses old ideas and institutions in ways that most of us have pretty
much given up on. As hopeless as the Bush Administration's nicotine patch for
Social Security would have been, it pointed in the right direction. Now don't
hit DELETE when I refer to privatization, or when I mention one of my own most
hated financial band-aids, the Annuity.
Both are needed to permanently fix the Social Security mess, to get it
away from people who are neither managers nor investment specialists, and to
make the whole system work more economically. The purpose of this article is to
get you to think about it---and to make you want to elect a hero with the guts
to fix it. Unfortunately, Elvis and Joe DiMaggio have left the building.
Are you surprised that there is no Social
Security Trust Fund---no investments and no Investment Managers? This is a
gigantic Government designed and controlled Ponzi scheme that has worked
incredibly well in spite of congressional tinkering and prohibitively high
costs to everyone involved. There was always a tax plan for funding the
benefits, but never an Investment Plan. And as difficult as it is for me to
admit, no sophisticated Investment Plan is really necessary. We just need a new
and reduced contribution plan, one that isn't designed to fund every
politically sensitive entitlement that compromises itself down the aisle. We
need a simplified benefit structure that supplements privately funded and
no-longer-taxed retirement programs. Healthcare just has to be a separate
issue. We can eliminate all the unnecessary bells and whistles simply by
mandating personalized benefit funding. Let the politicians deal with homeland
security while the private sector deals with things financial.
After the repeal of the Social Security
tax and implementation of mandated Individual Retirement Plan Contributions, the
Social Security bureaucracy will retain several important functions: 1)
Qualifying private sector companies and licensing them to provide Social
Security Retirement Income Annuities, or SSRIAs. Thousands of providers will be
needed, but only, fixed income experienced, profitable companies need apply. 2)
Developing a computerized system for participant/provider matching---inspired
randomness is essential. 3) Proactive monitoring of compliance with the minimal
rules, installation of fraud detection systems, and investigation of all
violations by providers, participants, and retirees. 4) Keeping the plan
sacred, simple, and principally unchanged by future legislation. The plan must
be kept: simple and profitable for providers; painless and visible to participants;
timely and comprehensible to retirees.
The SSRIA is a new and improved version of
the ancient Deferred Fixed Annuity Contract---a boring but guaranteed
retirement benefit vehicle, funded by both mandated and voluntary payroll
deductions, with a whole bunch of new wrinkles that make it an ideal Social
Security replacement program. For example, and unlike existing annuity
contracts: 1) Participants will be allocated to Qualified SSRIA Providers so
there will be no sales commissions, no business acquisition or retention costs,
no advertising expenses, etc. 2) All SSRIA contracts, regardless of provider,
will contain the same terms, interest guarantees, retirement benefit choices,
and pre-retirement death benefits, thus eliminating any incentives for internal
fraud and manipulation of statistics. 3) Qualified providers will establish
separate subsidiaries to manage and control SSRIA operations and to assure that
only Investment Grade Value Stocks and high quality, income securities are used
to fund future benefits. Index Funds and other high-risk securities and
contracts would not be allowed, and equity-based investments would be kept
below thirty percent of each providers separate SSRIA investment portfolio. 4)
All qualified providers will use the same mortality, investment earnings, and
expense assumptions, and all benefits will be fully guaranteed by the parent
corporations.
The SSRIA is a supplemental retirement
program, funded by a much smaller, yet flexible, payroll deduction, and it is
designed to be the foundation of a retiree's total retirement package---a
benefit floor. Participants will choose (annually, for the following year) to
deposit from the required 2% up to a maximum 4% of their Pre-Tax Income to
their personal SSRIA, a contract that will follow them everywhere, from
employer to employer, throughout their working years. Before retirement, a
death benefit equal to the full cash value of the contract will be paid to one
or more designated beneficiaries. At retirement, participants can elect either
a Life Annuity or a Joint & 50% Survivor Annuity. No variable plans of any
kind will ever be allowed; there will be no loan privileges, withdrawals, or
dividends. Providers are expected to make a reasonable profit, which will
ultimately be determined by their operating and investing abilities---hmmm, I
smell capitalism.
Employer sponsored benefit programs and
individual savings and investments are expected to make up the bulk of private
retirement programs. The SSRIA will assure that everyone has something,
probably significantly more than the current system provides, but individual
savings and retirement plans, both company sponsored and personally funded,
will be encouraged by new IRS policy. No retirement income, regardless of
source will be subject to income taxation. Neither employers nor self-employed
persons will be required to make matching contributions of any kind to employee
SSRIAs. However, they will be encouraged to use their improved cash flow to
increase employment or to reduce prices, perhaps by a new system that will
reduce their corporate income tax obligations as a reward for boosting the
economy. Similarly, billions of dollars of discretionary spendable income will
find its way back into the economy from consumers whose payroll deductions have
been slashed deservedly.
Two other thoughts: (1) All government
employees at all levels, elected, appointed, or hired, would be moved into the
new system. (2) SSRIAs would be available to all non-payroll and/or voluntarily
unemployed American citizens.
Change is good; keeping change this simple
is even better.
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.valuestockindex.com
Author
of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy"
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articles,trust fund
Solving
Social Security: Fire the Politicians!
What
Social Security Trust Fund: Fire the Politicians!
Simplified
Social Security: A Personal Approach
There
is no "Social Security Trust Fund"... no investments and no
Investment Managers. There was always a tax plan for funding the benefits, but
never an Investment Plan. This is a gigantic Government designed and controlled
Ponzi scheme that has worked incredibly well in spite of congressional
tinkering and prohibitively high cost.
The
SSRIA is a personal retirement program, funded by a much smaller, yet flexible,
payroll deduction, and it is designed to be the foundation of a retiree's total
retirement package... a benefit floor. The SSRIA is a new and improved version
of the ancient Deferred Fixed Annuity Contract... a boring but guaranteed
retirement benefit vehicle.
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