Some dumb questions about social security
Over at Begging to Differ, Venkat collects a few musings from around the inter-web on the subject of social security and investor choice, and asks the astute question, "they sound like they have it all figured out. I wonder why these people aren't money managers??"
For instance, Professor Bainbridge (an actual economist) fisks a Los Angeles Times article by Peter Gosselin, saying:
nvesting is really rather simple. You park your money in no-load passively-managed index funds, weighted as heavily to equities as your risk tolerance can take, and then you get on with the rest of life. As Nobelist Clive Granger told Gosselin (not that Gosselin got the point): "I would rather spend my time enjoying my income than bothering about investments," which is exactly what passive investing allows you to do. If you need proof at length, be sure to check out the latest edition of Burton Malkiel's classic A Random Walk Down Wall Street.By the by, Gosselin has tapped into (but not really understood) some of the learning on behavioral economics:
Analysts examining the actual behavior of individuals — as opposed to what most economists' theories predict — find that it rarely conforms to standard notions of what's rational. Instead, it often involves systematic mistakes that end up producing the very opposite of what people say they intend.
That's not exactly right, especially the adjective "rarely," but set that aside. As I wrote in a TCS column a while back, Richard Thaler, the leading exponent of the behavioral finance theories Gosselin invokes, has made a telling admission:
Mr. Thaler … concedes that most of his retirement assets are held in index funds, the very industry that Mr. Fama's research helped to launch. And despite his research on market inefficiencies, he also concedes that "it is not easy to beat the market, and most people don't." (Link)
So if personal accounts come down the pike, put your money in passively-managed no-load funds and forget about it. If the Democrats and their MSM allies like Gosselin manage to block personal accounts, put what little discretionary money Uncle Sam leaves you after taxes in passively-managed no-load funds and forget about it. In the long run, you'll come out ahead of the game with a lot less stress.
Well, yeah. Bainbridge is dead right: if you're not a professional investment manager, or if you don't have the time or inclination to keep yourself constantly updated as to what moves to make to optimize your market position, it's best to park your dough where it will do the most good for the least amount of work. Investing is simple... it's just not easy. But t's also easy, per Bainbridge, Galt, and Collier, to sit back and armchair-quarterback other people's best interests. It's even easier to look at, say, GM's pension plan and say "how stupid for them to fund pensions with debt!" Sure, it's clear now that that scheme didn't work out so well for the company or for GM's pensioners, but you know what they say about hindsight. Not that there's nothing to objecting to recent scandals and stories -- it is in fact dumb to invest your pension in the company you work for. But what do you do when, like my father-in-law, the company invests your pension in its own stock, and you don't get a say in that?
So it is that I am brought to wonder about Social Security and what's actually a solid idea. Maybe I'm being unspeakably naive, but I really do wonder have to wonder about these "private accounts" they talk so much of these days. They sound in theory like a decent proposal, but without more information it's not worth deciding whether they are a good idea or a bad one. Kind of like saying "yes, I would like a sandwich," but not knowing whether you're getting shit or salami.
I'm assuming that if private accounts ever get off the ground, the Social Security folks will have to offer a limited and relatively risk-averse basket of intrinsically diversified investment instruments to consumers (i.e., me and you.). But if we are held to investing our SS monies in, say, a limited group of mutual funds or even hybrid instruments containing a yearly adjusting blend of mutual funds and bonds like Vanguard's "Target Retirement" funds, then how much "choice" will we really have? As I see it, that's probably the best outcome for everyone, but it raises tough questions as to who gets to manage that money and how they will get paid. Harvard University recently weathered a controversy during which the money managers for their endowment got gigantic bonuses after a very, very good year. The controversy was over whether it was right for a private institution, whose income is dedicated to the future improvement of the institution only, has a right to pay money managers huge bonuses. On the "no" side, there's what I just said. Universities exist to educate students, and funds need to be carefully and dutifully put to that end. On the "yes" side, there's the very powerful argument that to attract and retain top managers who are more likely to achieve top returns, you have to pay them as well as they'd be paid at Fidelity or Goldman Sachs.
Who will be the government's money managers? Will those contracts be competed for by private firms? Will their fee structures and practices then be regulated by the government, making those contracts into golden handcuffs for the companies that win them? Is it right for the US government to funnel Social Security through private firms?
And what if the government's money managers work for... the government? Not only will we see the Harvard controversy writ in flaming letters ten miles high every time a good year comes around, but when's the last time a government bureaucracy excelled at anything productive? Just what we need... surly underpaid career bureaucrats with bottom-tier MBAs chucking our money into whatever's easiest.
But if we as investors are given more latitude to invest our gubmint pensions, is that better? I have asked, and been assured that, even if everyone in the country puts all the weight of their social security money into index fund account, it isn't enough to skew the market. That's a big market. But what happens if we are given more freedom to invest, and actually use it? In Sweden, every citizen got a telephone book sized pamphlet listing every single investment choice they could ever want for investing their state pensions. That turned out very poorly. If the menu gets too big, and no guidance is given, investors make wildly foolish choices. Even if we were offered a more modest palette of investment choices, what would the effects be of periodic "dumb" investor-driven SS-money gold rushes on small market segments that get a lot of hype? Will the emerging markets securities market and the small-cap widgets market periodically bubble and crash as overeager and underthinking investors move their money around? Not that most people will, probably. But the dim stars could ruin the game for everyone.
Hei Lun of Begging To Differ expects that whatever options we get, it will probably be something like we now get for our 401(k)s - a dozen or two dozen limited options keyed to different horizons and risk aversities. That would be perfect. But again, who will manage that money?
Me, I'm not a money manager because I don't have the quant skills, and because I spend too much time wringing my hands over naive questions like I've just posed. But naive as they are, I would really like to see them answered before I throw my support behind the President's, or anyone's, plan to overhaul Social Security.
One more thing. Some critics see the President's proposal to means-test Social Security payments as an attempt to frame Social Security as welfare. I hope that doesn't happen, and I really hope that pensions and welfare don't become conflated in people's minds. We're a rich country, and as I see it there's nothing wrong to lending a hand to old people who have worked all their lives and have nothing (or very little) to show for it.







