February 16, 2005

Social Security history...

FDR’s Social Security reform

James Taranto’s Best of the Web offered insight into Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s clear understanding that the generational transfer of wealth was not the way to finance Social Security:

In Friday's Political Diary (subscribe here), John Fund offered an interesting bit of Social Security history:

In an address to Congress on January 17, 1935, President Roosevelt foresaw the need to move beyond the pay-as-you-go financing of the current Social Security system. "For perhaps 30 years to come funds will have to be provided by the States and the Federal Government to meet these pensions," the president allowed. But after that, he explained, it would be necessary to move to what he called "voluntary contributory annuities by which individual initiative can increase the annual amounts received in old age." In other words, his call for the establishment of Social Security directly anticipated today's reform agenda: "It is proposed that the Federal Government assume one-half of the cost of the old-age pension plan, which ought ultimately to be supplanted by self-supporting annuity plans," FDR explained.

"What Roosevelt was talking about is the need to update Social Security sometime around 1965 with what today we would call personal accounts," says one top GOP member of the Ways and Means Committee. "By my reckoning we are only about 40 years late in addressing his concerns on how [to] make Social Security solvent."

Today's reform opponents, in other words, are backward-looking even by the standards of 70 years ago.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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