So Where Are Those Social Security Dollars?

Since nobody gets my quantum cat box gay marriage riff, I'll explain something else.

Poor and middle class people in this country have been told that we need to give a large tax cut to the wealthiest 1% of people in this country. The reason, we are told, is that this will produce expansion in the economy. This, in turn, will create more jobs, raise the incomes of everyone, and just generally make everything turn out super.

Yesterday a one of my colleagues asked a question about taxes. We pulled out a spreadsheet and calculated roughly how much he's paid in social security taxes over his career of seven years (he's not yet thirty). We calculated that he has paid roughly $78,000 in social security taxes in that time. Seems like quite a lot, doesn't it? We are including, of course, both sides of the social security puzzle -- employer paid and employee paid taxes. If the employer was not paying these taxes, they could (and would) be given to the employee as wages.

At this point is is useful to note that the tax cuts for the wealthy are being financed by removing money from the social security surplus. Very large parts of my everyone's social security payments are diverted into the general fund. The general fund is operating at a huge deficit.

Is my colleague better off holding a promise to pay social security from the federal government, approximately valued at $0 and a promise by the GOP that the improving economy will help him out? Or would he be better off with his $78,000?

Any potential benefit to the poor and middle class derived from ephemeral supply-side effects is dwarfed by the tax theft this country is currently engaged in.

The social security taxes apply massive pressure against poor and middle class income mobility. Without being able to save this money and develop some capital of their own, they are forever trapped in a paycheck to paycheck existence, and forced to be wage earners.

When we give massive tax cuts to the wealthy, we do tremendous damage to the hopes and dreams of the other 99% of Americans, who can't save enough to make changes in their lives.

A corporation runs a pension plan for twenty years, and manages the assets in the trust fund. The workers have contributed 15% of their paychecks to this fund, on the understanding that it will be used for their retirements. The officers of the company "borrow" money from the trust and use it to finance general operations of the company and give themselves massive pay increases. They leave an IOU, signed and stamped and gold-starred.

In the private world, we would prosecute. We would call this theft. Or at least we would have, before the GOP congress of 1998 got its hands on the IRS, prevented them from investigating corporate fraud, and told them to go after earned income tax errors instead, so they can extract dozens of dollars from maids who make $6,000 a year.

Posted by Ross Ross on   |   § 2

§ 2 Comments

1

The entirety of the US tax system is completely fubared. Who believes that there is some sort of lock box around social security revenue, or that someone under the age of 40 will ever get anything back from the money they pay in SS tax? It is a tax on wage earners, and nothing more. And quite a high one as well.

There is no question that your colleague would be better off with $78,000 in his pocket, rather than a promise for a pension that might - might -realize a 0% return on investment. I'd feel better if they called a spade a spade and just said it was a regular tax, and stopped fooling with the clumsy deception of SS revenue being "off the books."

It is ridiculous that in a free society anyone, rich or poor, has to pay almost half their income to the government. And SS is a slow motion crime against the unretired.

Except for Ross' class rhetoric, I agree completely. Everyone needs to keep more of their money. Everyone should have the opportunity to create wealth. And no one should ahve to listen to the (bipartisan) lies about Social Security.

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