When the president talks to America
about something as serious as working
families' retirement security, we need
to hear sound facts and straight talk.
But that's not what we heard from
President Bush in last night's State
of the Union address.
He didn't say working people would
end up with lower benefits under
Social Security privatization. He
didn't talk about the high price
working families would pay for
privatization—in benefit cuts, new
government debt and potential Enron-ization
of America's most successful family
protection program. Here's what you
didn't hear—please share these facts:
- With private pensions and public
employee retirement plans under
attack, working families need more
retirement security, not less. But
privatizing Social Security would
make retirement less secure by
cutting guaranteed benefits by 30
percent even for workers who do not
choose privatized accounts.
- For workers who do choose to
have privatized accounts, the
government would take back 50 cents
for every $1 in an account—on top of
the 30 percent cut in guaranteed
benefits.
- For the average worker who lives
20 years beyond retirement, that's a
$152,000 cut in guaranteed benefits.
Privatization would push many more
seniors into poverty.
- Privatization would hurt the
economy and explode the deficit,
passing on $2 trillion in debt to
our children during the first decade
alone. Most of that money would be
borrowed from foreign bankers in
China and Japan.
- Privatization would open Social
Security up to corruption, waste and
Enron-ization because politicians
would hand-pick which Wall Street
investment companies could make
billions off our privatized
accounts. Decisions about Americans'
retirement security should be based
on what's best for average people,
not tied to politicians' wealthy
friends or companies that have
political influence.
- We must strengthen Social
Security—but we must take the time
to do it right so we help rather
than hurt working families. We
should be talking about commonsense
fixes for Social Security rather
than slashing benefits. First, we
must insist the government pay back
money that's been borrowed from the
Social Security trust fund. We also
could end the "wealthy wage
exemption" so CEOs pay the same
Social Security taxes on their
incomes as average working people
pay on theirs. We could roll back
President Bush's most excessive tax
breaks for the very wealthy. And we
can help working families build
private pensions and savings on top
of guaranteed Social Security.
Americans deserve the Social
Security benefits we have paid for—we
will not accept a privatization plan
that makes retirement less secure. And
we will not accept the notion that
keeping older Americas out of poverty
is not "fiscally sustainable" while
tax breaks for millionaires are.
Last night President Bush may have
been fuzzy about his plans for Social
Security—but he made it clear that
when he talks about fiscal discipline,
he means disciplining working families
and America's most vulnerable—the
children, the poor and people with
disabilities—to create and preserve
policies that benefit the very rich.
He made it clear that when he talks
about an "ownership" society, he
really means a "you're on your
ownership" society. Count on the
budget he proposes next week to make
this even clearer.
To get more information on Social
Security, including fact sheets and
printable fliers, visit the AFL-CIO
Social Security website at:
www.aflcio.org/socialsecurity
Thank you for acting to protect
Social Security for working families.
In solidarity,
Working Families e-Activist
Network, AFL-CIO
Feb. 3, 2005
*Based on
analyses of the report by the
President's Commission to
Strengthen Social Security.