Social Security Archive

Results per page: 50 | 100

Results by year: 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 - 1998

  • What the New CBO Report Finds About Social Security “Grow Accounts”
    Jason Furman
    September 21, 2005

    On July 14, Rep. Jim McCrery (R-LA) and various other Republican members of the House of Representatives introduced H.R. 3304.  This legislation, similar to a plan proposed by Senator Jim DeMint (R-SC), would establish Social Security private accounts, called “GROW accounts.”  These accounts would receive …
  • Policy Basics: Top Ten Facts on Social Security's 70th Anniversary
    Jason Furman
    August 11, 2005

    President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act on August 14, 1935, which established a basic compact between generations:  younger workers would contribute payroll taxes, and retired workers would have a more secure retirement.  Presidents from Dwight Eisenhower to Ronald Reagan have signed landmark Social …
  • Private Accounts Would Substantially Increase Federal Debt and Interest Payments
    James R. Horney and Richard Kogan
    Revised August 2, 2005

    All of the major proposals to replace a portion of Social Security with private accounts would require large increases in federal borrowing for many decades.  This increased borrowing is not necessary to restore Social Security solvency.   Instead, the increased borrowing would be needed to finance the creation of the private …
  • The DeMint and McCrery Social Security Plans
    Jason Furman and Robert Greenstein
    Revised July 20, 2005

    On July 15, Rep. Jim McCrery and a number of other Republican House members introduced legislation to establish private accounts in Social Security.  The legislation embodies the plan that Rep. McCrery, Rep. Clay Shaw, and other members unveiled several weeks ago and is very similar to the plan that Senator Jim DeMint …
  • Would the DeMint Social Security Plan Promote Fiscal Responsibility?
    Jason Furman and Robert Greenstein
    June 24, 2005

    Supporters of the DeMint proposal argue that the Social Security surplus is currently being “raided” by the rest of the budget because the surplus is being used to help cover the deficit.  The claim that Social Security is being raided and that its finances are being weakened as a result …
  • Statement Of Robert Greenstein On The DeMint Social Security Proposal
    June 23, 2005

    Under this DeMint plan, Social Security’s current annual surpluses would be shifted to private accounts rather than used to purchase Treasury bonds for the Social Security Trust Fund.  This shifting of funds would end when the Social Security surpluses disappeared.  This shifting …
  • President Misleads On Social Security Rate Of Return
    Jason Furman
    June 6, 2005

    In Kentucky on June 2, the President stepped up his efforts to promote his Social Security plan with a claim that private accounts provide a substantially higher return than traditional Social Security without any added risk.  The President said: “Right now, when we collect your money, if you’re a youngster out …
  • Boosting Income and Contribution Limits For Pension Savings Would Swell Deficits, Do Little For Middle-Class Families
    Joel Friedman and Robert Greenstein
    May 18, 2005

    Ways and Means Chairman Bill Thomas has suggested that new tax cuts to promote retirement savings should be considered as part of the effort to reform Social Security.  Chairman Thomas has expressed interest in a range of proposals.[1] A number of retirement-related tax proposals have strong proponents on Capitol Hill, in …
  • White House Distortions Mask Social Security Benefit Reductions
    Jason Furman
    Revised May 10, 2005

    The President recently endorsed “sliding-scale” benefit reductions in Social Security, as proposed by investment executive Robert Pozen.[1]  The Pozen proposal entails reducing benefits for most workers below the benefit levels that would be paid under the current benefit structure.  (The benefits under the …
  • Did the President Mislead on Social Security in His April 29 Press Conference?
    Robert Greenstein
    Revised May 4, 2005

    viewers with misimpressions about his private-accounts proposal and about the Social Security system.  Many of these statements had a common element — they created misleading impressions about how the private accounts would work, because of the President’s failure to explain in the press conference that people who …
  • An Analysis of Using "Progressive Price Indexing" To Set Social Security Benefits
    Jason Furman
    Revised May 2, 2005

    In his news conference on April 28, President Bush embraced a Social Security benefit reduction plan that is consistent with a proposal advanced by Robert Pozen, a former vice chairman of Fidelity Investments and a member of President Bush’s Social Security Commission.  Pozenhas developed a change in the Social Security …
  • Why the President's Social Security Proposals Could Ultimately Lead to the Unraveling of Social Security
    Jason Furman, Robert Greenstein and Gene Sperling
    May 2, 2005

    President Bush has now endorsed a combination of “progressive price indexing,” a change in the Social Security benefit structure proposed by investment executive Robert Pozen, and private accounts carved out of Social Security.  This combination spells danger for the future of the Social Security system. …
  • Press Release: Social Security Lifts 13 Million Seniors Out of Poverty
    February 24, 2005

    Social Security benefits raise nearly 13 million seniors age 65 and older above the poverty line, a new Center report finds.  The report provides data on the poverty-reducing effects of Social Security in each state. “In the average state, Social Security benefits are the difference between …
  • Social Security Lifts 13 Million Seniors Above the Poverty Line
    Arloc Sherman and Isaac Shapiro
    February 24, 2005

    Social Security benefits have a powerful poverty-preventing effect among the elderly.  An analysis of Census data shows that nationwide, Social Security benefits lift nearly 13 million seniors age 65 and older above the poverty line.  These figures reflect a three-year average for the period from 2000 through 2002.…
  • An Overview of Issues Raised by the Administration's Social Security Plan
    Jason Furman and Robert Greenstein
    Revised February 7, 2005

    This analysis is based on the briefing on the Administration’s Social Security plan that was provided to reporters on February 2 by a “senior Administration official.” 1.  Administration Acknowledges Private Accounts Would Do Nothing to Improve Social Security Solvency. The Administration official …
  • New White House Details Show the Proposed Private Accounts
    Jason Furman
    February 4, 2005

    A fact sheet released by the White House on February 3 acknowledged that retirees who receive a real rate of return on their private accounts equal to three percent above inflation (which is the Congressional Budget Office’s projected rate of return on such accounts, with risk …
  • President Tries to Have It Both Ways
    Jason Furman
    February 3, 2005

    In his State of the Union Address, President Bush used misleading statistics to create a false sense of crisis about Social Security.  At the same time, in a White House briefing several hours before the President’s address, a senior Administration official acknowledged that the private accounts the Administration is …
  • The Administration’s Misleading $600 Billion Estimate of the Cost of Waiting to Act On Social Security
    David Kamin and Richard Kogan
    Revised February 2, 2005

    President Bush recently claimed that delaying action on Social Security by “...just one year adds $600 billion to the cost of fixing Social Security.” [1] Other Administration officials have used the same figure. But this figure is highly misleading. The AmericanAcademy of Actuaries has specifically warned …
  1. Jobs
  2. RSS
  3. Contact Us
 

Sign Up for E-Mail Alerts

RSS Feeds

Browse Reports