The Last Time They Attacked Social Security: Articles from the Struggle in 2005

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Below are two articles published by Socialist Alternative in 2005, the last time that corporate politicians tried to attack social security. Then, the proposal by Bush was different than the current discussion on the bipartisan “Deficit Commission,” but both proposals were and are an assault on our hard-fought and well-deserved pensions. The articles below deal with the history of social security and the fight against Bush’s proposal. For a socialist analysis of today’s situation, please see Greg Beiter’s excellent article, “Corporate America Plans to Slash Social Security — Prepare to Defend Our Pensions


Keep Wall Street Out of Social Security — Why Workers Should Oppose Bush’s Privatization Plan

March 1, 2005
By Marie Medeiros

As President Bush travels the country trying to convince Americans that Social Security is in crisis and needs to be reformed, workers of all ages and political stripes are wondering how the president’s proposals will affect their retirement.

They’re right to be concerned.

While Bush talks about “reform,” his real aim is to privatize and ultimately gut Social Security – a system that has provided guaranteed income for senior citizens for 70 years since it was won through workers’ struggles in the 1930s. His Social Security plan would generate a windfall for the financial industry while boosting the national debt and forcing future generations of retirees into poverty.

The Bush Plan

For years, conservatives and sections of the financial industry have dreamed of bringing Social Security money into the private market. After winning reelection, Bush announced that Social Security was facing a crisis and that changes must be made immediately or the system would go bankrupt.

His solution: encourage workers to divert part of their payroll taxes into private accounts to be invested in the stock market. Instead of going back into the larger pot of Social Security money, the accounts would belong to individual workers who would then bear the risk of their investment. Social Security benefits would be cut to cover the costs.

Private Accounts Are No Solution

Bush’s plan would shift many people from the Social Security system to the insecurity of the private market, without solving any of the system’s underlying problems.

While Bush promises workers at his stage-managed town hall meetings that their money will grow in private accounts, it could just as easily shrink. If the market crashes before a worker retires, he or she could be left with little or no pension. Since Social Security benefits would be reduced for every dollar placed in a private account, the market would have to perform well just for workers to break even.

Far from eliminating Social Security’s projected deficit, the accounts will actually cost the government up to $2 trillion over the next two decades as younger workers begin to divert some of their money away from Social Security.

Ultimately, the administration plans to make up the lost revenue by linking benefit increases to prices instead of wages. The move could cut Social Security benefits for younger workers by as much as 40% – even if they don’t choose to invest in private accounts.

Wall Street firms, however, will be reaping plenty of benefits. They stand to make close to $1 trillion in fees from managing the accounts over the next 75 years, according to a study by economists at the University of Chicago.

Defined Benefits vs. Defined Contribution

Bush’s plan is part of a broader drive by employers to make workers bear more of the costs of retirement. During the post-World War II period, labor unions won strong contracts with “defined benefit” pension plans, in which workers were guaranteed a specific monthly payment from their employer after they retired.

But in recent years, as unions grew weaker, large numbers of employers switched to “defined contribution” plans, also known as 401(k) plans. Under a 401(k), the worker and the employer both make monthly contributions to a savings account that is invested in the stock market; when the worker retires, he or she gets only whatever money remains in the account.

It’s this model, where employers pay less but workers have no guaranteed income for retirement, that Bush wants to follow with Social Security.

Saving Social Security

While Social Security faces a long-term fiscal problem as the Baby Boom generation retires, there are many ways to address this without privatization or benefit cuts. Currently, workers only pay Social Security tax on income of up to $90,000 per year. Raising the cap so higher-income workers pay their fair share would cut Social Security’s projected shortfall in half, according to the AARP. Removing the cap would bring in even more revenue.

Rolling back Bush’s tax cuts for the wealthy and withdrawing the troops from Iraq would also bring in money to shore up Social Security and other social programs.

Finally, large corporations should increase the amount they pay in Social Security taxes until the system is solvent. It’s the least they can do for workers who give most of their lives to a company.

We must not only maintain Social Security benefits for tomorrow’s workers, but we must increase them. With healthcare costs soaring, the average Social Security income of about $300 per week is not enough to provide for seniors’ basic needs. A guaranteed check of at least $500 per week adjusted for inflation, along with universal health care, is the only way to ensure retirement security for future generations.


The History of Social Security — How it Was Won and How to Defend it Today

May 1, 2005
By Bryan Koulouris

In 1935, Congress passed and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed into law the Social Security Act. This Act provided a system of federal benefits for retirees and the elderly. In 1956, the law was expanded to include the disabled.

The Social Security Act wasn’t passed and signed because the politicians were “nice guys” or “looking out for the people.” Whenever any law is passed that seriously benefits workers, it is a concession by big business to the mass movements of ordinary people.

Social Security’s Origins

In 1935, huge mass movements in U.S. society were shaking capitalism to its core. In the previous year, there were local general strikes and demonstrations of tens of thousands of workers in San Francisco, Minneapolis, and Toledo, Ohio. These led to important victories for workers and helped spark a wave of strikes and organizing drives in key industries centered around the newly formed Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). This militant labor federation soon grew into the millions.

Massive strikes scare bosses because when we don’t work, they can’t make any profits by exploiting our labor. Strikes hit big where it hurts them most – in their pockets. Strikes also show working people their own collective power and can lay the basis for wider political struggle.

Together, organized with a clear program and clear methods of struggle, we can achieve anything. That’s exactly what the bosses and their politicians, including FDR and Congress, feared when they passed the Social Security Act.

The strikes and other struggles of the 1930s were also connecting broader issues besides the wages and workplace conditions of the people on strike. They took up the issues of the unemployed, the elderly, and the need for broad social programs. Socialist organizations also recruited many members and led mass unemployed organizations.

Under pressure from these struggles, and in an attempt to co-opt the fight into big business politics, the Democrats enacted the “New Deal,” which included Social Security.

The Lessons of History

One reason that led to the labor movement moving into action was the crisis created by the Great Depression, which began with the stock market crash of 1929. Today Bush is asking us to trust the stock market with our Social Security money. This same market crashed 75 years ago, and that was a key reason for the events that led to Social Security in the first place.

The proposal for Social Security privatization is a huge gamble, like shooting craps at a casino – only this gamble is being played with loaded dice. The stock market has gone down recently, and with rising oil prices, a falling dollar, and a ballooning national debt, the market could go down more. We can’t let big business gamble with our future.

Many working people depend on Social Security for their survival. As of 2000, 45.2 million people were receiving Social Security benefits. In 2000, the Social Security program paid out $407.6 billion in benefits.

With the conditions that we face today, we need everything we can get. Housing and gas prices are up, the cost of higher education is skyrocketing, we’re being robbed by pharmaceutical companies, and budget cuts are going on everywhere. On top of that, corporations have shipped millions of industrial and technical jobs out of the country.

It is damn near impossible for working people to save significant amounts of money for retirement. As of 2000, one third of Americans had no savings at all, and one third have less than $2,500 in savings.

While fighting to defend Social Security as a basic safety net, we also need to raise the need to expand and strengthen it. Currently, Social Security benefits for many are hardly enough to survive on. All retirees should have a government guaranteed pension of at least $500/week, along with free, high quality healthcare as part of a universal national system.

Make the Rich Pay

Right now, working people pay a higher percentage of their income to Social Security than the rich. Social Security taxes are subject to a wage threshold. Any income earned above the threshold is not taxed. The threshold for 2005 is $90,000.

Bush endlessly talks about a “crisis” in Social Security. However, there is a simple solution. The threshold could be reversed so that ordinary people don’t have to pay, and the rich can cough up the necessary money for our Social Security. Simply put: Tax the rich!

Big business and their politicians have already raided Social Security many times to pay for their wars. Lyndon Johnson (a Democrat) raided it to help pay for Vietnam. Bush raided it for the Afghanistan war.

Bush talks about his overhaul of Social Security creating an “ownership society.” His vision is simple: owners do not pay taxes, workers do.

The Democrats have let the framework of the debate become ridiculous. While opposing Bush’s privatization plan, their alternative offers nothing attractive to working people. Rather than showing how Social Security can be maintained and expanded by making the super rich and big business pay, they advocate increasing workers’ Social Security taxes and decreasing benefits!

The history of Social Security has shown us the necessity of organizing mass action to beat back the corporations and their politicians. The leadership of the labor and other progressive movements needs to be challenged to take the lead in organizing against not just the assault on Social Security but also the broader attacks working people face.

But this will require ending these movements’ fatal dependence on the corporate-controlled Democrats. History has shown us that we can’t depend on big business politicians to represent us, but we can use our own social power to fight back and win!

Socialist Alternative Says:

  • No to Bush’s privatization of Social Security!
  • For the labor, women’s, anti-war and other progressive movements to organize local demonstrations culminating in a national march on Washington to defend Social Security, women’s rights, and “Money for Pensions, Jobs and Education, not War!”
  • No to benefit cuts, raising the retirement age, or increasing workers’ Social Security Tax!
  • Flip the Social Security tax! All wages below $90,000/year to be tax free – only tax income above $90,000/year
  • Congress should re-pay all the money it has stolen from Social Security
  • Expand Social Security to cover all retirees and disabled workers with a government guaranteed $500/week minimum benefit
  • Free, universal, high quality healthcare

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