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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 28, 2005
SCHUMER UNVEILS NEW SOCIAL SECURITY CALCULATOR SHOWING
HOW MUCH 760,000 CAPITAL REGION RESIDENTS LOSE UNDER PRIVATIZATION
PLAN
New Web Calculator Tabulates How Much New Yorkers Could Lose
Under Privatization Scheme
Schumer Hosts Live Demonstration of Social Security Calculator
with New Yorkers Inputting Individual Age and Income
Schumer: We Will Not Allow Washington to Play Retirement Roulette
US Senator Charles E. Schumer, unveiling a new Social Security
web calculator, demonstrated how much New Yorkers stand to lose
under the Administration’s proposal to privatize Social Security.
Joined by Capital Region residents who input their year of birth
and average income, Schumer released a new program that computes
a side-by-side personal comparison of the Bush Privatization Plan
and the current Social Security system. Schumer also pledged to
protect Social Security from privatization and preserve the benefit
for generations to come.
"When it comes to cutting Social Security, my answer is no
way, no time, no how," Schumer said. "The federal government
made a promise to all Americans that if they worked hard, paid their
taxes, and played by the rules, they could retire in dignity and
get their benefits. The privatization plan that is on the table
puts everyone’s benefits at risk.”
The Social Security calculator, which can be accessed through a
button on Schumer’s website, www.schumer.senate.gov, allows
Americans to simply plug in their average annual salary and year
of birth and see a side-by-side comparison of the benefits between
the Bush Privatization Plan and the current Social Security system.
The calculator shows the expected annual benefits under both systems,
the difference between the two plans as well as the percent reduction
that Americans will face under the Bush Privatization Plan.
All numbers for the calculator are annual benefits adjusted for
inflation. Calculations are based on Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) economic assumptions. The President has said that individual
accounts would do nothing to restore long-term solvency and that
further benefit cuts are necessary. Since he has not made a specific
proposal, these estimates assume that benefits are “price
indexed,” a proposal made in Plan 2 of President Bush’s
Social Security Commission. The calculator also incorporates the
Privatization Tax that Senate Democrats discussed last week.
In the Capital Region, approximately 760,000 people are under age
55, and could lose Social Security benefits. Social Security has
become an essential facet of American life, with one in every six
Americans receiving a Social Security benefit and more than 95 percent
of all workers covered by Social Security. Today, 47 million people
receive these benefits. Nine out of ten individuals age 65 and older
receive Social Security benefits, and roughly two-thirds of beneficiaries
receive 50 percent or more of their income from the program. Social
Security also provides benefits to disabled workers and survivors
of deceased workers.
The President’s proposed privatization plan worsens Social
Security’s already existing long-term financial problems.
According to the Social Security Administration, Social Security
will be able to pay full benefits until at least 2042. With the
President’s private accounts and no other changes, the system
would only be able to pay full benefits through 2031. Privatization
shortens the Social Security trust fund by eleven years because
payroll taxes that would otherwise go to pay benefits are diverted
to private accounts, which forces the government to borrow trillions
more to pay benefits to current retirees.
“Its simple math,” Schumer said, “You can’t
use the same dollars for two different things.”
Then, to restore solvency, the privatization plan slashes benefits
in two ways. The first, price indexing, targets young Americans
who are just entering the work force. The younger a future social
security recipient is today, the smaller their initial Social Security
benefit will be.
The second cut, the privatization tax, is the additional amount
of a promised Social Security benefit that a recipient loses as
a result of having set up a private account. Under the privatization
plan, recipients get to keep what’s in their account, minus
any administrative fees. But the guaranteed Social Security benefit
will be reduced by whatever is contributed to an account plus some
interest. Private accounts only help if the annual rate of return
earned on investments exceeds the rate of inflation plus three percent.
If the money is invested poorly, or the market drops right before
retirement, then the expected payout will drop accordingly.
The President’s plan also increases the birth tax - the amount
of debt that is laid on the shoulders of each newborn child. It
is already high enough, but the President’s plan adds almost
$17,000 to every child’s birth tax, because it adds nearly
$5 trillion in new debt over the first 20 years.
“It is morally irresponsible to be passing such a huge birth
tax to future generations. All of this borrowing will eventually
have to be repaid with interest, just like a home mortgage or a
personal credit card,” said Schumer.
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