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Social Security Reform |
Issue #8 The
Concord Coalition June 22, 2005
Personal Retirement
Accounts:
Should They be
Voluntary or Mandatory?
Participation
in Social Security is mandatory. If a
worker is employed in a job that is "covered" by the system, he or she must pay
the Social Security tax. This has been
a requirement of the system since its inception. The premise was that it had to be mandatory if it was to be
successful in keeping the greatest number of people from becoming
"dependent"--i.e., needing to be on welfare--in their old age. A voluntary system would have been subject
to gaming. People who failed to join,
thus evading payment of their "dues", could eventually become dependent on those
who did, creating a fundamental inequity.
President
Bush and a number of Members of Congress have proposed that Social Security
taxpayers be given a choice to invest part of their Social Security taxes in
personal retirement accounts. Although
such a reform would not turn Social Security into a completely voluntary
system--people would be required to either pay the FICA taxes or make equivalent
deposits in their new accounts--the idea of a voluntary accounts option
nonetheless carries many of the same vulnerabilities for the nation's largest
senior safety net as having a completely voluntary system.
Mandatory participation is basic to the concept of Social Security as
a universal system of social insurance.
It makes sense, therefore, that if personal accounts are added to the
system they should be universal and mandatory.
Given that Americans like the idea of choice, voluntary participation
may be a good political selling point for personal accounts but it would not be
good policy. Mandatory participation--especially if it involves new money rather than a
mere diversion of existing Social Security taxes--would be far more likely to boost national savings, maintain
progressivity within the system, and ensure that workers build meaningful
assets.
Social Security was enacted in the 1930s as a system that sought to
insure society as whole against poverty in old age. By some accounts, half or more of the aged were living in some
state of dependency. As a form of
social insurance, the program mandates participation while people work and
dictates coverage of as many as the political system will permit so that as few
as possible will enter their later years dependent on welfare programs and their
families. It requires contributions
(taxes) and prescribes a benefit formula that attempts to balance the return
each individual receives with the adequacy of the
benefits it provides in general--the goal being to afford people with a minimal
"floor of protection" when they come to that point in their lives when they can
no longer work. Today, 96 percent of the nation's workers are covered by the system.[1]
People don't
have to save on their own; they don't have to open Individual Retirement
Accounts (IRA)s or Keoghs; they don't have to join pension plans or contribute
to 401(k)s; they don't have to buy houses or accumulate other assets; they
don't have to take out life or disability insurance; and they don't have to set
aside money for their families' well being.
And their employers don't have to provide private pensions or other
benefits for their welfare. It is
prudent for workers and their employers to do those things, but they are all
voluntary. Social insurance is the one
thing that society mandates so that workers will have at least a minimal income
in retirement or when a disabling condition or death limits their ability to
provide for themselves or their families.
One of the
best commentaries on the subject came from a member of the business community
of the 1930s. Reinhart A. Hohaus, an
actuary employed by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and an advisor and
member of various Social Security advisory councils in
the early years of the program, wrote what has long been viewed as a classic
treatise on social insurance.[2] As excerpted from an article he wrote for
the Society of Actuaries, Hohaus framed the concept this way:
Social insurance… aims primarily at providing society some
protection against one or more hazards which are sufficiently widespread
throughout the population and far-reaching in effect to be "social" in scope
and complexion. Usually these risks are
not many in number. Yet if not guarded against through some organized means,
they produce large dependency problems that take their toll in terms not only
of financial but of human values as well.
Directed against a dependency problem, social insurance is
generally compulsory--not voluntary--giving the individual for whom it is
intended no choice as to membership.
Nor can he as a rule select the kind and amount of protection or the
price to be paid for all. All this is
specified in the plan, and little, if any, latitude is left for individual
treatment. Indeed, social insurance views society as a
whole and deals with the individual only as so far as he constitutes one small
element of the whole. Consistent with this philosophy, its first objective in
the matter of benefits should, therefore, be that those covered by it will, as
far as possible, be assured of that minimum income which in most cases will
prevent their becoming a charge on society. [3]
(emphasis added)
It has always
been a condition for receipt of Social Security benefits that a person work for
a specified period of time in covered employment (e.g., 10 years for retirement
benefits). Moreover, benefits are
derived from a person's wage history and, as a matter of equity, the more one
earns in covered employment the greater the benefits will be. However, with a benefit formula that
provides a higher return on the taxes for low-wage earners than high-wage
earners, automatic annuitization of benefits, no reduction in couples benefits
even though survivor benefits are automatic, the provision of benefits to
dependent spouses, aged parents, and children through high school, and
inflation adjustments once one becomes eligible, the system is awash in social
protections that are not ordinarily found in any other form of traditional
pension or insurance plan.
Taken
together, these features are rooted in the concept that Social Security should
be a floor of protection against what President Franklin Roosevelt once
described as the "vicissitudes of life."[4] It is the one form of preparation for old
age that people have as a safety net for life's adversities.
But there is
a condition for this benevolence: mandatory participation. The deliberate
actions people take with their lives are important--i.e., whether they will be
spenders or savers--but the other side of that is that society should not bear
the burden when it is too late to alter one's behavior or bad luck imposes
financial hardship. That's the true
nature of social insurance--it's insurance for society as well as for the
individual.
As
noted, Social Security attempts to balance social adequacy with individual
equity--meaning a
fair return on contributions. But today, for the first time in the history of
the program, large categories of newly retiring workers are due to get back
less than the market value of prior contributions.
According to the Urban Institute's calculations, the typical single male
retiring at age 65 in 1970 earned an inflation adjusted return of 6.4 percent on
his lifetime Social Security (Old-Age and Survivors) taxes. Today, the typical
single male retiring in 2005 can expect to earn a return of 1.9 percent. The typical single male retiring in 2040 is due to earn a return
of 1.6 percent--and this assumes that current-law benefits can be paid in full
without any increase in current-law taxes.
Social Security continues to offer a better deal to some categories of
workers than to others. But among
younger Americans, virtually all categories--including low-earners--will earn a
lower return on their Social Security taxes than they could if their taxes were
invested in risk-free Treasury debt.
The
problem of declining "moneysworth" has led many to conclude that Social
Security is not doing a good enough job of balancing individual equity with
social adequacy. Personal accounts
could help in this regard by improving the return on workers' contributions and
creating a tighter link between contributions and benefits.
While details
of the various proposals to create personal accounts under Social Security
vary, most of those now being considered envision voluntary participation.
Workers would be given the option of contributing a portion of their existing
Social Security taxes into a personal account.
Money deposited in the new accounts would belong to the individual, not
the government. The individual would
choose how much to deposit into the account (in some cases, up to a limit) and
what asset class they wish to invest in.
Upon retirement, death, or disability, periodic withdrawals or annuities
would be based on the accumulation of those deposits.
Under the
current system, taxes are deposited in the U.S. treasury and the money supports
the program's financial needs in the aggregate. Simply stated, the money does not belong to and is not put away
for each individual. Instead, the
Social Security Administration keeps track of a worker's earnings history–how
long the person worked and how much he or she made each year. What the worker put into the system, though
related to what they earned, is not directly relevant. It is the earnings record that establishes
eventual benefit levels. Upon
retirement (or death or disability), the individual or family members become
"entitled" to a monthly benefit derived by applying a formula to an average of
those earnings. That's the principle
difference between what the existing system does and what President Bush and
others have proposed.
The Consequences of All
Things "Voluntary"
Voluntary
participation in personal accounts conveys a very different meaning about the
nature of Social Security contributions than if the accounts were enacted on a
mandatory basis. To be sure, any form
of personal accounts--voluntary or mandatory--would
introduce the element of asset ownership, which is not present in the current
system. Voluntary accounts, however, would introduce the additional element of
choice and that, in turn, could begin to erode the program's underpinnings as a
system of universal social insurance.
Choice
implies control. Indeed, advocates of
voluntary accounts often tout "choice and control" as key selling points. Yet to the extent that choice and control
are emphasized in assessing the advantages of personal accounts, the social
insurance nature of the system is diminished.
A first step
toward a voluntary system opens it up to what is called "adverse selection." Those perceiving the most
to gain will opt for the alternative.
Clearly those with high incomes would lean toward choosing personal
accounts as they already perceive Social Security to be a bad deal and would
hope to do better with their own accounts.
At some point, so will people of more moderate means. Meanwhile, those with low incomes who
benefit the most from Social Security's current progressive tilt may be
reluctant to opt for personal accounts even though this choice may leave them
trapped in an unfunded pay-as-you-go system that must eventually cut back on
promised benefits.
And while
those who do opt to join the new system may start out with the perception that
they are putting money away for their retirement, they may decide later that
they want more discretion over the money and pressure Congress to weaken the
retirement saving condition--something Congress has already done with tax
preferred savings instruments.
At that
juncture, the safety net may begin to unravel.
The desire to improve Social Security's individual equity by moving toward personal ownership need not and
should not mean dismantling social insurance or "privatizing" Social Security. The mandatory
nature of the program doesn't end with the requirement to pay taxes. Its benefits are only available with the
onset of one or another of three events:
retirement, death, or disability.
And those limitations have been time tested--no President or Congress has
tried to challenge them.
This point
could easily be lost if a part of the system were deemed to be voluntary. People have a different perception of their
own discretionary savings than they do with Social Security. They may choose to contribute to personal
accounts with the idea that they are preparing for retirement, but they may
also feel that because they have the option to contribute, they should be able
to do what they want with the money. In
effect, what they may initially set aside for retirement they may some day want
to use for something else… a family illness, a house, a car, a child's
education, a boat, or a vacation. People may well begin to ask: if we can
choose to make deposits into our own accounts, why can't we choose when to
withdraw the money, and for what purpose?
Would workers then begin to demand the
freedom of opting in and out as their circumstances or the markets shifted?
Questions
such as these would be increasingly difficult for politicians to answer once
they had sold the public on reforms explicitly designed to promote choice and
control over Social Security contributions. With mandatory accounts, however,
the purpose would be explicit and clear--to boost retirement saving, not just for the individual
worker's well being but for the greater good of society as well. And because mandatory accounts would be
consistent with the concept of universal social insurance, policy makers would
find it much more acceptable politically to regulate investment options,
administration, and conditions of payout.
All of this would be necessary if
policymakers decide to include personal accounts as part of Social Security.
None of the perceived
advantages of personal accounts--such as higher returns on contributions, greater national saving, accumulation
of assets that can be passed to heirs, and a "lockbox" that politicians
couldn't pick to fund other governmental programs--requires that they be voluntary to be
successful. Just the opposite. If personal accounts can help to achieve
those things, there is no good reason to give workers the "option" of losing
out on them or to deprive society in general of the gains.
Workers would
face a profound choice under a system of voluntary accounts. And it may be one that it is unfair or
unreasonable to expect of them. It is
fine to have the hope and determination when one starts out in life that one
will achieve financial security, but most people don't know at the beginning of
their careers how they will fare. They
don't know if they will wind up rich or poor; whether they will become disabled
or die at a young age; whether they will be unemployed for long periods;
whether they will marry, divorce, or marry again; and if they do marry and have
a family, whether their kids or spouses will have serious illnesses that drain
their resources.
And yet a
system of voluntary accounts would force workers at some early stage of their
careers to choose between the market risk of personal accounts and the
political risk of an unfunded pay-as-you-go system. In effect, Americans would sort themselves into two vast segments--one making an enormous economic and
policy bet going one way, and the other making an equally high stakes bet going
the other way. Mandatory personal
accounts would carry the same potential advantages and risks for workers, but
would not require workers to begin their careers by tossing a coin.
American workers and
employers have some experience with voluntary savings plans such as 401(k)s and
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs).
To date, these plans have met with mixed results. According to some estimates, fewer than 3
percent contribute annually to an IRA and only 8 percent take full advantage of
an employer sponsored 401(k) plan. More
than 25 percent don't take advantage of such plans at all.[5] Recognizing the problem of under utilization,
an emerging trend in private sector plans is to make them less voluntary by
providing automatic enrollment. The
worker could still opt-out but without such a deliberate action he or she would
be enrolled in the plan and automatic deductions would be made from paychecks
into savings accounts.
The experience with
private sector plans suggests that participation in any new system of Social
Security accounts may have to be mandatory to ensure that personal savings will
actually increase. If our national
experiment with voluntary savings plans has demonstrated anything, it is that
workers do not take full advantage of the "choice" offered to them. As Dallas Salisbury, President and CEO of
the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) recently stated in testimony
before the House Ways and Means Committee, "Decades of data underline that
compulsion in savings and distribution produce better retirement income results
than open individual choice. If the policy objective is choice, that does not
matter. If the policy objective is
life-long retirement income security, it does matter."
Moreover,
enacting voluntary carve out accounts would add even more uncertainty to
long-term budget projections. Estimates
of a plan's cost must begin with an estimate of participation. When the Social Security Administration
evaluated the three models produced by the President's Commission to Strengthen
Social Security it produced several estimates for each model based on assumed participation
rates. The assumptions led to large
differences in the fiscal impacts. For
example, Model Two was estimated to cost $2.5 trillion over its first three
decades assuming 67 percent participation.
But assuming 100 percent participation, the plan was estimated to cost
$4.5 trillion over the same period.
Voluntary carve out accounts would increase both the amount and the
uncertainty of the government's fiscal exposure. This would not constitute prudent fiscal planning at a time when
the government is already facing large chronic deficits.
Conclusion
Society
has a legitimate interest in ensuring that people do not under-save during
their working lives and become free riders on some future means-tested safety
net the government feels compelled to provide.
Moving Social Security toward personal ownership--to help increase
saving, sustain a healthy economy, and improve the outlook for future retirees--does not have to occur at the expense of the
nation's social insurance blanket.
Many
personal account advocates, including the President, believe that personal
retirement accounts should be voluntary.
That would be a mistake. As a matter of principle, providing people with choice is
good. But choice is not without
bounds. People can't choose whether
their taxes finance the nation's military, its roads and bridges, its promotion
of public health and disease control, its police, firemen, and air traffic
controllers, its coast guard, its borders, its food safety, its national parks,
and so on. As a nation, we act
collectively through our various levels of government to support common
interests that no individual has the resources to do on his or her own.
Any new personal accounts
adopted as an element of Social Security should be mandatory. It is true that by staying under the current
system, workers face the risk that future Congresses will default on today's unfunded pay-as-you-go benefit promises, and personal accounts may reduce that
risk. But how exactly are workers
supposed to evaluate that risk against those inherent in personal accounts? And why should they be expected to? Choice is not important and can be
potentially damaging in a compulsory social insurance program whose primary
function is to protect people against poor choices. Under a social insurance system, if personal accounts are deemed
to be good for some, they should be good for all.
[1] The largest
group not participating is employees of certain state and local governments.
[2] See Policymaking for Social Security, Martha
Derthick, The Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C. (1979).
[3] Reinhart A. Hohaus.
"Equity, Adequacy, and Related
Factors in Old-Age Security," The Record, American Institute of Actuaries,
volume 37 (1938).
[4] "We can never insure one hundred percent of the
population against one hundred percent of the hazards and vicissitudes of life,
but we have tried to frame a law which will give some measure of protection to
the average citizen and to his family ..." Franklin Roosevelt's statement
on signing the Social Security Act, August 14, 1935.
[5] See,
Statement of Dallas Salisbury, President and CEO, Employee Benefits Research
Institute, May 19, 2005, testimony before the House Committee on Ways and
Means. See also, "IRA Ownership in 2004," Investment Company Institute, Research
in Brief Volume 14, No. 1 February 2005, indicating that about 40 percent of
households own an IRA with only about 10 percent of households contributing to
an IRA in 2003.