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-   -   Serious Time (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=23936)

Griff 11-13-2010 08:09 AM

Serious Time
 
David Brooks - The report from the chairmen lists some of the best ways to raise revenue and cut spending. But it comes with no enactment strategy. In this climate, asking politicians to end the mortgage deduction and tax employer health care plans and raise capital gains taxes and cut benefits for affluent seniors is like asking them to jump on a buzzing sack full of live grenades. They won’t do it.

Now we will get serious or collapse. Barring an unbelievable economic surge from a great scientific or technical leap, the free-ride is coming to an end. No more wars of choice without taxes to pay for them, no more hare-brained schemes from the left, we are exposed. We won't have the money for infrastructure. We can no longer afford to be a military force for world stability. We haven't done the supposed easy things like means testing social security let alone dump the mortgage interest deduction, the unacknowledged black hole in the housing crisis. Taxing employer health plans would hurt like hell but ask the Greeks what it is like to have all your greatness behind you.

Lamplighter 11-13-2010 10:14 AM

There seems to be some sort of consensus that the only path for SocSec is to keep separate from the federal budget.
I believe political progress could be made if that were truly the case and no book-keeping shenanigans were involved.

Then raising the retirement age in stages AND removing the existing cap on income
would be acceptable because it would spread the pain to everyone.

On the other hand, reducing Medicare reimbursements is just a hidden way of passing additional costs on
to the elderly because they will be billed for the bigger gap in payments to hospitals and physicians.

In the long run, I suspect it will take a requirement that physicians and hospitals "accept Medicare",
meaning they can't charge Medicare/Medicaid patients more than the patient's Medicare and private insurance level allows.
This used to be the case when patients had no other liquid resources,
but with the new Medicare rules and bankruptcy laws it just is not happening anymore.
Now, when a patient is admitted to hospitals for something serious, the finance office immediately begins
looking for the family's assets and is ready to put a lien on the patient's home.

xoxoxoBruce 11-13-2010 10:58 AM

Medicare would be in good shape if they hadn't stolen all the money to fund other projects, without raising the taxes to cover those projects.

I've seen a lot of Administrations, and Congresses in my lifetime. The one thing that has been consistent, is they're purpose in life is to spend money, our money, and in numbers that have always boggled my little pea brain.

But let's face it, they are a necessary evil. Any attempt to stop, or even slow them from spending money, while talked about ad infinitum, has always come to naught. So to my mind, the best we can do is try to get them to spend the money doing good for the citizens. If you can't stop the dog from digging, try to keep him in the area you want cultivated.

I don't think I'm being defeatist, just realistic, because every time I tried being idealistic I got my ass reamed. Example, I voted for both Nixon and Bush... once. Being realistic is trying to get the politicians to direct the inevitable pork, to benefit their constituents, and not the corporate coffers that have become the political powerhouses.

Lamplighter 11-13-2010 11:25 AM

What has happened to the Soc Sec funds (being transferred into the federal operating budget)
may be the biggest "dirty little secret" of politics... both Democrats and Republicans subscribed to it.

It was handled much the same way businesses moved funds out of
their own employee's pension funds into the company's operating budget.
The then company went belly-up and the feds had to take over the pension plans.

So many Soc Sec IOU's were spread into all federal agencies the debts probably can not be paid off when they come due.
Instead, we'll have a "blue ribbon commission" to recommend "forgiveness" of all those debts to the Soc Sec system,
and we start over with true pay-as-you-go financing.

ZenGum 11-13-2010 06:03 PM

In Parliament of Whores, P.J O'Rourke described the situation with social security. He's more than half satirical, but I think he has these facts, at least, correct.

Soc Sec takes some money in, pays some money out. If there is surplus (which there has usually been ... up until now) the only "investment" they are allowed to make is to buy US treasury bonds. A brief reflection on the insane gambles of the Savings and Loans crisis will make clear why no one trust bureaucrats with money.

Problem is, when they lend money to the treasury, the only thing the treasury can do is spend it. They're not allowed to invest it either.

Then in the future (which is now here), when soc sec runs into the red, they call up the feds and say, pay some back please. The feds can only shrug, say "we've spent it" and either raise taxes on everyone else, or cut or delay soc sec payments.

US style social security seems to be either disguised and poorly managed taxation, or a giant ponzi scheme.

Is this how it looks to you guys?

footfootfoot 11-13-2010 08:06 PM

It is a ponzi scheme

Griff 11-14-2010 06:05 AM

Yeah, that is all it is.

glatt 11-14-2010 07:39 AM

I've paid in for 20 years. I'd be OK with them scrapping the entire system now and losing those 20 years of payments. I'm not OK with them asking me to continue to pay into it, and then taking it from me just as I'm ready to retire. I get the feeling that's where we are heading though.

xoxoxoBruce 11-14-2010 07:58 AM

I doubt it. If they decide to scrap it, I'll bet they say anyone born after X date in the future, won't be included in SS. I doubt like hell they'll exclude anyone that's paid in, even for a year.
Boeing did this in the last local contract, anyone hired after the beginning of this contract is not included in the pension system. Those people get a much higher company matching to their 401k, instead.

HungLikeJesus 11-14-2010 08:56 AM

The entire world economy is a Ponzi scheme.

Lamplighter 11-14-2010 09:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 694188)
I doubt it. If they decide to scrap it, I'll bet they say anyone born after X date in the future, won't be included in SS. I doubt like hell they'll exclude anyone that's paid in, even for a year.
Boeing did this in the last local contract, anyone hired after the beginning of this contract is not included in the pension system. Those people get a much higher company matching to their 401k, instead.

with a planned phase out in 5 years...

Lamplighter 11-14-2010 09:35 AM

Griff's OP was also concerned about the federal budget.
The NY Times now has a way for everyone to decide how to balance the budget...

Quote:

Budget Puzzle: You Fix the Budget
Today, you’re in charge of the nation’s finances.
Some of your options have more short-term savings and some have more long-term savings.
When you have closed the budget gaps for both 2015 and 2030, you are done.
Make your own plan, then share it online.

Gravdigr 11-14-2010 02:32 PM

When I read "Serious Time", I thought this thread would be about prison. I am not disappointed.

Undertoad 11-14-2010 02:43 PM

The NY Times put together a quick game. Solve the deficit by 2030. It's pretty easy to do if you cap Medicare growth.

xoxoxoBruce 11-14-2010 02:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lamplighter (Post 694197)
with a planned phase out in 5 years...

No.


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