Article image
Dean Baker
Published: Wednesday 10 October 2012
“This is very bad news to the tens of millions of people who depend on Social Security now or expect to in the near future.”

Social Security: President Obama’s Biggest Failure in Last Week’s Debate

Article image

President Obama definitely had a bad night when he faced Gov. Romney in Denver for the first presidential debate. However for many listeners the worst moment was not due to his atypical inarticulateness. Rather the worst moment was when he quite clearly told the country that there was not much difference between his position on Social Security and Gov. Romney’s. He also expressed his desire to “tweak” Social Security to improve its finances.

This is very bad news to the tens of millions of people who depend on Social Security now or expect to in the near future. It’s also bad news to the hundreds of millions of people who have been counting on the Social Security system to provide a degree of financial security to their retired or disabled family members.

After all Gov. Romney clearly does not seem to have warm feelings toward the program. His vice-presidential pick, Paul Ryan, has been the most ardent proponent of privatization in the House. If Romney is committed to Social Security, picking Rep. Ryan as his running mate would be a strange way of showing it.

When President Obama links arms with Romney on Social Security, it is not good news for supporters of the program. Nor was the situation made better by the desire to “tweak” the system.

In Washington, "tweak" is a code word used by people who want to cut Social Security but lack the courage to say it explicitly. For example, their favorite “tweak” is changing the cost-of-living adjustment formula in a way that reduces retirees’ benefits by 0.3 percentage points annually. This would add up to a 3 percent cut in benefits after 10 years, a 6 percent cut after 20 years and a 9 percent cut after 30 years.

In other words, this tweak is real money, especially for the oldest beneficiaries who also tend to be the poorest. In fact, this tweak of Social Security is likely to have more impact on the income of most retirees than taking back President Bush’s tax cut on the wealthy would have on their income.  The other items that are usually part of the tweak package are phasing in a further increase in the age for getting full benefits (beyond the increase to age 67, which is already in current law) and a reduced benefit formula for workers who earned more than $40,000 a year in their working lifetime. 

The public has every reason to be furious at President Obama for suggesting that he would cut Social Security. We know that the retirees and near retirees are not wealthy as a group. A recent study by the Pew Research Center found that the typical elderly household had net wealth of just over $170,000. This is slightly less than the median house price of $180,000.

That means that if the typical household headed by someone over age 65 took all of their money, they would have almost enough to pay off the mortgage on their house. They would then be entirely dependent on their Social Security check, which averages $1,200 a month, for their income. And President Obama wants to cut these people’s Social Security.

The situation is especially infuriating because the poor state of the finances of retirees and near retirees is largely the fault of the people in both the Obama and Romney camps who steered the economy into a huge ditch. In the 90s they thought the stock bubble was cool and in the last decade they thought the housing bubble was the way to boost growth.

As a result, many middle-class retirees and near retirees saw much of their savings disappear when the stock bubble burst in 2000-2002. They took another hit when the markets crashed again at the start of the last recession. And many saw the equity in their home vanish when the housing bubble burst. In addition, recent spells of unemployment has forced many older workers to dip into their retirement savings. In other words, people who took the advice of the experts and tried to do the right thing got nailed.

The government has also badly failed workers in pushing them to rely on 401(k)s for retirement instead of traditional pensions. These tax subsidized accounts can easily siphon off more than one-third of annual returns as administrative expenses. While this allows the financial industry to pocket tens of millions annually from these accounts, few workers are able accumulate substantial savings by the time they reach retirement.  

Given all the harm that economic policy has done to the current generation of retirees and near retirees, it is incredible that President Obama would tell us that we have no choice; we have to vote for someone wants to kick them in the face yet again.

Last month, Vice President Joe Biden took the opposite position, assuring an audience there would be no cuts to Social Security in a second Obama Administration. Biden was completely unambiguous; he pledged no changes whatsoever and told his audience that he guaranteed it.

Tens of millions of people will be much happier after the next debate if President Obama can assure us that Biden was speaking for the administration. Bad economic policy from both parties has done much harm to retirees and near retirees.

If our politics were not dominated by Wall Street we would be talking about raising Social Security not lowering it. A renewed commitment to protecting Social Security from the tweakers would at least be a big step to limit further damage.



Get Email Alerts from NationofChange
Author pic
ABOUT Dean Baker
Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. He previously worked as a senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute and an assistant professor at Bucknell University. He is the author of several books, including Plunder & Blunder: The Rise and Fall of the Bubble Economy, The Conservative Nanny State: How the Wealthy Use the Government to Stay Rich and Get Richer and The United States Since 1980. He was the editor of Getting Prices Right: The Debate Over the Consumer Price Index, which was a winner of a Choice Book Award as one of the outstanding academic books of the year. He appears frequently on TV and radio programs, including CNN, CBS News, PBS NewsHour, and National Public Radio. His blog, Beat the Press, features commentary on economic reporting. He received his B.A. from Swarthmore College and his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Michigan.

Top Stories

8 comments on "Social Security: President Obama’s Biggest Failure in Last Week’s Debate"

kofi123

October 10, 2012 2:31pm

Obama is so conflicted. He obviously loves his wife and his children. I think his love for the country was beaten out of him in his first term by people like Emmanuel, Gaithner, and the rest of the Clintonista's he put around himself.

He is following in Bill Clintons footsteps. Compaign left and rule right. The biggest hint is that he was the one who established Simpson/bowles as vehicle to cut the deficit instead of jobs program, debt relief for homeowners/students, moratorium on foreclosures, etc,.

We should vote him in, but kick his ass from inauguration day until his term ends. Don't let this b@#ch do a Clinton on us by collecting his $100 million in hush money from the federal reserve and Goldman Sachs and then sell us out.

Barfly

October 10, 2012 2:06pm

President Obama should have listed Romney's lies and spent the evening cross examining Romney.

Serge Lubomudrov

October 10, 2012 12:32pm

It's not a "failure," actually. Obama just said exactly what he meant.

Who still thinks that Obama is a "lefty," or a "progressive," or even a "liberal"? He is a conservative ("blue dog," by his own admission) democrat.

yellowdogdemo

October 11, 2012 10:15pm

Yes, Obama is still a Progressive and as one (if reelected) he will appoint the correct people to the Supreme Court.

BozoAdult

October 10, 2012 1:00pm

If Republicans understood how far to the right President Obama is they would vote for him. Unfortunately there is that little skin shade factor. Republicans, particularly Southern Republicans, are racists.

Norman

October 10, 2012 11:48am

Sorry Dean but you missed the symantics of the debate. Romney came on strong and the President was low key waiting for him, to put his foot in his mooth as he always does. Obama did not want to give him the space to continue to lie on his achiedements. Clever- as for Social Security this was a slip by the President as he will definitely keep Social Secuurity as it is. Everyone should be aware of this and do not make much of this error,

wordgrl

October 10, 2012 11:38am

After reading the Simpson-Bowles proposal with a group, we decided that "tweak" would gradually have a great impact on seniors' quality of life and is not good for the "middle class". Beware talks of "tweaks" unless it is talk about raising the income limit that is subject to FICA tax.

danh

October 10, 2012 9:43am

Dean Baker is right on point, as usual.

It does unfortunately look as though our standard of living will continue to decline through cuts to Social Security, no matter who wins the election.

But somehow we'll find the money to finance our foreign-bases/endless-wars addiction.

How can we get this country into a detox program so we can take care of the kids instead of blowing our wad on our war habit?