This article originally appeared in Dollars
and Sense magazine. Proponents of Social Security privatization are trying to claim
that the current program is unfair to African Americans and that
a privatized program would serve African Americans better. This
argument lends support to the privatization agenda while at the
same time giving its advocates a compassionate gloss. But the claims
about African Americans and Social Security are wrong.
The Old Age Survivors and Disability Insurance
Program (OASDI), popularly known as Social Security, was put
in place by Franklin
Roosevelt to establish a solid bulwark of economic rights for the
public – specifically, as he put it, "the right to adequate
protection from the economic fears of old age, sickness, accident,
and unemployment." Most Americans associate Social Security
only with the retirement – or old age – benefit. Yet it was created
to do much more, and it does.
As its original name suggests, Social Security is an insurance
program that protects workers and their families against the income
loss that occurs when a worker retires, becomes disabled, or dies.
All workers will eventually either grow too old to compete in the
labor market, become disabled, or die. OASDI insures all workers
and their families against these universal risks, while spreading
the costs and benefits of that insurance protection among the entire
workforce. Currently, 70% of Social Security funds go to retirees,
15% to disabled workers, and 15% to survivors.
Social Security is a "pay as you go" system, which means
the taxes paid by today’s workers are not set aside to pay their
own benefits down the road, but rather go to pay the benefits of
current Social Security recipients. It’s financed using the Federal
Insurance Contribution Act (or FICA) payroll tax, paid by all working
Americans on earnings of less than about $90,000 a year. While
the payroll tax is not progressive, Social Security benefits are – that
is, low-wage workers receive a greater percentage of pre-retirement
earnings from the program than higher-wage workers.
In the 1980s, recognizing that the baby boom
generation would strain this system, Congress passed reforms
to raise extra tax
revenues above and beyond the current need and set up a trust fund
to hold the reserve. (See "Social
Security Isn’t Broken," Dollars and Sense.) Trustees
were appointed and charged with keeping Social Security solvent.
Today’s trustees warn that their projections, which are based on
modest assumptions about the long-term growth of the U.S. economy,
show the system could face a shortfall around 2042, when either
benefits would have to be cut or the FICA tax raised.
Those who oppose the social nature of the program
have pounced on its projected shortfall in revenues to argue
that the program
cannot – or ought not – be fixed, but should instead be fundamentally
changed. Privatization proponents are seeking to frame the issue
as a matter of social justice, as if Social Security "reform" would
primarily benefit low-income workers, blue-collar workers, people
of color, and women. Prompted by disparities in life expectancy
between whites and African Americans and the racial wealth gap,
a growing chorus within the privatization movement is claiming
that privatizing Social Security would be beneficial to African
Americans.
Opponents attack the program on the basis of
an analogy to private retirement accounts. Early generations
of Social Security beneficiaries
received much more in benefits than they had paid into the system
in taxes. Privatization proponents argue those early recipients
received a "higher rate of return" on their "investment" while
current and future generations are being "robbed" because
they will see "lower rates of return." They argue the
current system of social insurance – particularly the retirement
program – should be privatized, switching from the current "pay-as-you-go" system
to one in which individual workers claim their own contribution
and decide where and how to invest it.
But this logic inverts the premise of social insurance. Rather
than sharing risk across the entire workforce to ensure that all
workers and their families are protected from the three inevitabilities
of old age, disability, and death, privatizing Social Security
retirement benefits would enable high-wage workers to reap gains
from private retirement investment without having to help protect
lower-wage workers from their (disproportionate) risks of disability
and death. High-wage workers, who are more likely to live long
enough to retire, could in fact do better on average if
they opt out of the general risk pool and devote all their money
to retirement without having to cover the risk of those who may
become disabled or die, although they would of course be subjecting
their retirement dollars to greater risk. But low-wage workers,
who are far more likely to need disability or survivors’ benefits
to help their families and are less likely to live long enough
to retire, would then be left with lower disability and survivors’ benefits,
and possibly no guaranteed benefits. This is what the Social Security
privatization movement envisions. But you wouldn’t know it from
reading their literature.
And when the myths about Social Security’s financial straits meet
another American myth – race – even more confusion follows. Here
is a look at three misleading claims by privatization proponents
about African Americans and Social Security.
Myth #1
Several conservative research groups argue
that Social Security is a bad deal for African Americans because
of their lower life
expectancies. "Lifetime Social Security benefits depend,
in large part, on longevity," writes the Cato Institute’s
Michael Tanner in his briefing paper "Disparate Impact:
Social Security and African Americans." "At every age,
African-American men and women both have shorter life expectancies
than do their white counterparts. … As a result, a black man
or woman earning exactly the same lifetime wages, and paying
exactly the same lifetime Social Security taxes, as his or her
white counterpart will likely receive a far lower rate of return." Or
as the Americans for Tax Reform web site puts it: "A black
male born today has a life expectancy of 64.8 years. But the
Social Security retirement age for that worker in the future
will be 67 years. That means probably the majority of black males
will never even receive Social Security retirement benefits."
The longevity myth is the foundation of all the race-based arguments
for Social Security privatization. There are several problems with
it.
First, the shorter life expectancy of African Americans compared
to whites is the result of higher morbidity in mid-life, and is
most acute for African-American men. The life expectancies of African-American
women and white men are virtually equal. So the life expectancy
argument can really only be made about African-American men.
Second, the claim that OASDI is unfair to African
Americans because their expected benefits are less than their
expected payments is
usually raised and then answered from the perspective of the retirement
(or "old age") benefit alone. That is an inaccurate way
to look at the problem. Because OASDI also serves families of workers
who become disabled or die, a correct measure would take into account
the probability of all three risk factors – old age, disability,
and death. Both survivor benefits and disability benefits, in fact,
go disproportionately to African Americans.
While African Americans make up 12% of the
U.S. population, 23% of children receiving Social Security survivor
benefits are African
American, as are about 17% of disability beneficiaries. On average,
a worker who receives disability benefits or a family that receives
survivor benefits gets far more in return than the worker paid
in FICA taxes, notwithstanding privatizers’ attempts to argue that
Social Security is a bad deal.
Survivors’ benefits also provide an important
boost to poor families more generally. A recent study by the
National Urban League Institute
for Opportunity and Equality showed that the benefit lifted 1 million
children out of poverty and helped another 1 million avoid extreme
poverty (living below half the poverty line).
Finally, among workers who do live long enough
to get the retirement benefit, life expectancies don’t differ
much by racial group. For example, at age 65, the life expectancies
of African-American and
white men are virtually the same.
President Bush’s Social Security commission proposed the partial
privatization of Social Security retirement accounts, but cautioned
that it could not figure out how to maintain equal benefits for
the other risk pools. The commission suggested that disability
and survivor’s benefits would have to be reduced if the privatization
plan proceeds.
This vision is of a retirement program designed
for the benefit of the worker who retires – only. A program with
that focus would work against, not for, African Americans because
of the higher
morbidity rates in middle age and the smaller share of African
Americans who live to retirement.
Myth #2
African Americans have less education, and
so are in the work force longer, than whites, and yet Social
Security only credits
35 years of work experience in figuring benefits. Tanner says, "benefits
are calculated on the basis of the highest 35 years of earnings
over a worker’s lifetime. Workers must still pay Social Security
taxes during years outside those 35, but those taxes do not count
toward or earn additional benefits. Generally, those low-earnings
years occur early in an individual’s life. That is particularly
important to African Americans because they are likely to enter
the workforce at an earlier age than whites…."
This claim misinterprets the benefit formula for Social Security.
Yes, African Americans on average are slightly less educated than
whites. The gap is mostly because of a higher college completion
rate for white men compared to African-American men. But the education
argument fails to acknowledge that white teenagers have a significantly
higher labor force participation rate (at 46%) than do African-American
teens (29%). The higher labor force participation of white teenagers
helps to explain why young white adults do better in the labor
market than young African-American adults. (The racial gaps in
unemployment are considerably greater for teenagers and young adults
than for those over 25.)
These differences in early labor market experiences mean that
African-American men have more years of zero earnings than do whites.
So while the statement about education is true, the inference from
education differences to work histories is false. By taking only
35 years of work history into account in the benefit formula, the
Social Security formula is progressive. It in effect ignores years
of zero or very low earnings. This levels the playing field among
long-time workers, putting African Americans with more years of
zero earnings on par with whites. By contrast, a private system
based on total years of earnings would exacerbate racial labor
market disparities.
Myth #3
A third claim put forward by critics of
Social Security is that African-American retirees are more
dependent on Social Security
than whites. Tanner writes: "Elderly African Americans are
much more likely than their white counterparts to be dependent
on Social Security benefits for most or all of their retirement
income." Therefore, he concludes, "African Americans
would be among those with the most to gain from the privatization
of Social Security – transforming the program into a system of
individually owned, privately invested accounts." Law professor
and senior policy advisor to Americans for Tax Reform Peter Ferrara
adds, "the personal accounts would produce far higher returns
and benefits for lower-income workers, African Americans, Hispanics,
women and other minorities."
It’s true that African-American retirees are more likely than
whites to rely on Social Security as their only income in old age.
It’s the sole source of retirement income for 40% of elderly African
Americans. This is a result of discrimination in the labor market
that limits the share of African Americans with jobs that offer
pension benefits. Privatizing Social Security would not change
labor market discrimination or its effects.
Privatizing Social Security would, however, exacerbate the earnings
differences between African Americans and whites, since benefits
would be based solely on individual savings. What would help African-American
retirees is not privatization, but rather changing the redistributive
aspects of Social Security to make it even more progressive.
The current formula for Social Security benefits is progressive
in two ways: low earners get a higher share of their earnings than
do higher wage earners and the lowest years of earning are ignored.
Changes in the formula to raise the benefits floor enough to lift
all retired Social Security recipients out of poverty would make
it still more progressive. Increasing and updating the Supplemental
Security Income payment, which helps low earners, could accomplish
the same goal for SSI recipients. (SSI is a program administered
by Social Security for very low earners and the poor who are disabled,
blind, or at least 65 years old.)
The proponents of privatization argue that
the heavy reliance of African-American seniors on Social Security
requires higher
rates of return – returns that are only possible by putting money
into the stock market. Yet given the lack of access to private
pensions for African-American seniors and their low savings from
lifetimes of low earnings, such a notion is perverse. It would
have African Americans gamble with their only leg of retirement’s
supposed three-legged stool – pension, savings, and Social Security.
And, given the much higher risk that African Americans face of
both death before retirement and of disability, it would be a risky
gamble indeed to lower those benefits while jeopardizing
their only retirement leg.
Privatizing the retirement program, and separating
the integrated elements of Social Security, would split America.
The divisions
would be many: between those more likely to be disabled and those
who are not; between those more likely to die before retirement
and those more likely to retire; between children who get survivors’ benefits
and the elderly who get retirement benefits; between those who
retire with high-yield investments and those who fare poorly in
retirement. The "horizontal equity" of the program (treating
similar people in a similar way) would be lost, as volatile stock
fluctuations and the timing of retirement could greatly affect
individuals’ rates of return. The "vertical equity" of
the program (its progressive nature, insuring a floor for benefits)
would be placed in greater jeopardy with the shift from social
to private benefits.
Social Security works because it is "social." It is
America’s only universal federal program. The proposed changes
would place Social Security in the same political space as the
rest of America’s federal programs – and African Americans have
seen time and again how those politics work.
William E. Spriggs is a senior fellow with the Economic Policy
Institute and was formerly the executive director of the National
Urban League Institute for Opportunity and Equality. |