THE PRIVATIZATION CALCULATOR
Suppose you were born in 1971 and youre earning $35,000 a year. How much
would you collect in your retirement if Social Security were privatized? The
Cato Institute, the libertarian Washington think tank that has been sounding
the drumbeat for privatization for years, offers a handy calculator on its website
that will give you an answer with the click of a few keys. Using Catos
default assumptions, if you put your Social Security taxes into a stock fund
every month, you would retire with a nest egg of $1.26 million (in todays
dollars), and a monthly income of more than $10,000.
Americans will be hearing a lot about that beckoning pot of gold in the months
ahead. President George W. Bush has created a commission to examine the future
of the Social Security program, but the commission is comprised exclusively
of members who want to transform Social Security from todays insurance
program into something like the collection of private investment accounts touted
by Cato. Unfortunately, the case for privatizing Social Security is built on
claims that are either misleading or simply false, which should raise serious
questions about the risks associated with a fundamental overhaul of one of the
nations most successful and popular programs.
So whats wrong with Catos calculator?
First, it assumes that all of your Social Security taxes would be invested.
That is impossible. Most of the Social Security payroll taxes you pay today
are used to pay todays Social Security beneficiaries. That money cannot
be shifted immediately to private accounts without turning off the spigot for
older Americans, disabled workers, and their families. Simply put, the price
of your private account would be the elimination of your grandmothers
or your fathers Social Security check. No one, not even the Cato Institute,
wants to do that. The small portion of our Social Security taxes that are not
paid out immediately are used to bolster the Social Security trust funds that
will be needed to meet commitments to the baby boomers, who will soon begin
to retire. There is no extra money for private accounts in Social Security taxes.
Every dollar, and more, is needed to meet existing Social Security promises.
(See Part I of this series.)
Second, the calculator ignores the turbulence and fluctuations that investors
face in the stock market. It mechanically implies that every investor does very
well. In reality, in financial markets there always are winners and losers.
Some workers will draw losing cards, perhaps because they played poorly, or
perhaps because of bad luck. If you end up retiring during a market downturn,
you may wind up using a calculator to figure out how to make ends meet rather
than counting your millions.
Third, Catos calculations not only make the questionable assumption
that the high past growth rates of stock prices will continue, but also that
all of the increased value will go directly to stockholders. Anyone who invests
in a mutual fund knows, or should know, that commissions, marketing, and administrative
costs significantly reduce what ends up in your bank account. Those fees require
a subtraction of tens of thousands of dollars from the calculators result.
HIDDEN PITFALLS: ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS AND MARKET RISK
Where to Find the Real Millionaires: Wall Street
Brokerage houses, banks, and mutual funds have been very active in the campaign
to privatize Social Security. Small wonder, since they stand to gain enormous
fees if billions of dollars are shifted each year from Social Security payments
into accounts under Wall Street management. Of course, those fees must come
from somewhere, namely from the balances in individual accounts.
Among the 100 best stock mutual funds [1],
management fees range from 0.2 percent per year to 1.4 percent of the asset
value of an account. The average is near the high end of that range, however,
and many mutual funds charge substantially more. Smaller accounts require proportionately
larger management fees because many costs such as gathering and mailing out
information dont depend on account size. Indeed, most mutual funds actively
discourage small accounts by setting a minimum opening deposit of $1,000 to
$3,000.
From the standpoint of the system as a whole, privatization would add enormous
administrative burdens. Instead of the current trust fund accounts, the government
would need to establish and track many small accounts, perhaps as many accounts
as there are tax-paying workers.147 million in 1997.
Many workers accounts would be so small that they would be of no interest
to profit-making firms. The average taxable earnings of a worker is roughly
$25,000 (in 1997, the last year with complete data, the average taxable earnings
of the workers who paid into the system was $22,400). Two percent of $25,000
comes to $500 per year. Francis X. Cavanaugh, who supervised the thrift savings
program for federal employees.a program that privatization advocates often point
to as a model.argues that the costs of administering so many small accounts
would overwhelm any benefits to be gained from the stock market. For example,
he estimates that the government would need to hire 10,000 highly trained workers
just to oversee the accounts and answer questions from workers. [2]
Experience in the United Kingdom offers a warning about what the future could
bring regarding management costs. Workers there have been allowed to open private
accounts starting in 1988, since which time management fees and marketing costs
among financial intermediaries have eaten up an average of 43 percent of the
return on investment.
Timing Is Everything
Besides being costly, individual accounts would be risky. In the unlikely case
that Americans need to be reminded, stock market returns are not a sure thing.
A worker who invested his or her retirement fund in a stock portfolio that matched
the S&P 500 index and cashed out upon retirement in March 2000 would have
a nest egg almost a third larger than someone who retired just a year later
using exactly the same investment strategy. Of course, that is because the stock
market plunged over those twelve months.
Market volatility means that it would matter a great deal whether you retired
during an upswing or downturn. Gary Burtless of the Brookings Institution demonstrated
this by examining what would have happened to workers with forty-year careers
who retired in each year from 1911 until 1999. Following Burtless method,
Figure 1 assumes that each worker put 2 percent of his or her earnings in the
stock market every year (reinvesting dividends) and earned the actual historical
return, year by year. The figure shows the wide variation in the retirement
income workers would have received. Clearly, some workers would do much better
than others based simply on when they happened to retire.
Because of the volatility and unpredictability of stock market returns, it is
difficult to compare directly what any given worker would receive under privatization
versus the current system. Today, a low wage-worker who retired would receive
Social Security benefits equal to 90 percent of preretirement income, while
a worker making the average wage would receive 42 percent.
Under privatization, timing obviously would matter a great deal in determining
who would win and who would lose compared to the current system. So would the
unknown amount of any guaranteed benefit that might be offered over and above
the assets accumulated in the private accounts. But because most privatization
proposals do not identify how any guaranteed supplement to the private accounts
would be financed, it is unsafe to assume that they would bridge the gap between
the horizontal line and the jagged line. Again, paying for new private accounts
out of payroll taxes requires reducing the promised payments to current and
future
beneficiaries.
Click to view Figure 1: Retirement Income from Investment in the Stock Market
A Rose-Colored Crystal Ball?
In spite of market ups and downs, stocks were on average an excellent investment
over extended time frames in the twentieth century. The Social Security Administrations
chief actuary has used the high returns over the 1926-98 period as the basis
for official forecasts, projecting an annual return of seven percent above the
rate of inflation.
But will the next seventy-five years look like the past seventy-five years in
stock market performance? Not very likely. In spite of the markets significant
decline since its peak early in 2000, stocks still are very high priced, based
on measures such as historical price-earnings ratios and dividend levels. This
alone suggests that the stock market will have difficulty generating 7 percent
annual gains in the foreseeable future.
Moreover, experts such as the chief actuary himself project modest and declining
economic growth. Professor Peter Diamond of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
suggests that 4.0 percent to 4.5 percent per year is a much more realistic forecast
of stock returns over the next seventy-five years. [3]
Another expert, Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, has
calculated that returns of 3.0 percent to 3.6 percent is the range that future
profit growth would support. Even at 4 percent per year, stocks would be a good
investment, outperforming bonds. But stocks still would be much more risky.
The idea that, win or lose, a worker would do better in the stock market than
under Social Security is nonsense. Individual accounts on average are likely
to have a modest rate of return and a great deal of risk. On average, taxpayers
will not gain much for giving up the security in Social Security,
and many families surely will lose out.
OTHER BUGS IN THE PRIVATIZATION CALCULATOR
Special Risks to Women
In todays Social Security system, a spousealmost always the wifewho
leaves the paid workforce to raise children is still entitled to a benefit upon
retirement equal to half her husbands benefit. Even a divorced spouse
outside the workforce has pension rights today under Social Security. But under
most detailed privatization plans, a woman outside the paid workforce would
have no pension rights at all.nothing beyond what her husband might give her
from his personal account.
Moreover, because women have longer life expectancies than men, the assets accumulated
in their accounts need to be stretched out over a greater number of years to
sustain them. In essence, that reduces the value of every dollar in their accounts
relative to those of men. In contrast, projected life spans do not affect benefits
under todays Social Security because monthly payments are guaranteed for
life and are based entirely on the best thirty-five years of past earnings.
Finally, women earn less than men, on average. That implies that they would
make smaller contributions to their individual accounts, leaving them with relatively
less upon their retirement. In contrast, todays Social Security replaces
a higher share of the past earnings of retirees who had lower incomes.
Taking Your Lumps
Most Americans have no idea what an annuity is. A product of the insurance industry,
an annuity converts a lump sum of money today into a stream of monthly payments
in the future. [4]
For example, in the best-case scenario presented in Table 1, a nest egg of $104,858
converts into an annuity paying $870 a month.
Because annuities seem obscure and technical, they do not come up in most discussions
of individual accounts. But they are essential. Almost every proposal for individual
accounts to replace Social Security includes a section about annuities. It would
be extremely unwise to replace Social Security with a system that did not include
mandatory annuitization. If retirees had full control of their nest eggs, what
would happen to their families if they exhausted the savings in their accounts,
either through mismanagement or perhaps through deliberate overspending? Requiring
workers to purchase annuities when they retire ensures income for the rest of
their lives not only for them but for their families. More fundamentally, annuities
protect taxpayers from footing the bill if a retiree drives his family into
poverty.
Today, few annuities are sold to retirees because Social Security serves as
their basic monthly support. Moreover, no annuity product offers the protection
against inflation that Social Security provides. Every year, Social Security
benefits are increased for everyone by a percentage equal to inflation in the
previous year. Annuities, in contrast, provide a payout that does not rise with
inflation.so inflation eats into their value. (This is one more element of privatization
that threatens those who live to an old age, notably women.)
It is difficult to predict what annuities with inflation adjustments would cost
under privatization, since the demand for them would suddenly explode. But experts
estimate that converting a lump sum into an annuity would probably cost more
than 10 percent of the value of the account. In todays thin market, the
cost of annuities without an inflation adjustment can even exceed 15 percent
of the value of the lump sum.
The need to provide annuities also would create the need for an entirely new
regulatory framework and bureaucracy. Would it be legal to offer lifetime annuities
at a lower cost to people with shorter life expectancies? This is unlikely to
be tolerated by the public. Most likely, different prices for men and women,
as well as various racial and ethnic groups, would be deemed discriminatory
and unacceptable. [5]
The Bottom Line
Let us take out a calculator of our own and figure out what would happen to
a worker beginning a career at the the average taxable income of $22,400, if
wages grew at 2 percent per year above inflation, and 2 percent of his or her
earnings were put into an individual account. The table below shows the results
using two sets of assumptions.
Click to view Table 1: Results with Private Social Security Accounts
If everything goes ideally.the return on investment really is 7 percent above
inflation, expenses are only 0.15 percent of asset value, the workers
career is forty years, and he or she can convert his or her nest egg into a
single life annuity at a minimal 5 percent cost -- then the worker will accumulate
about $105,000 for retirement, which will produce income of $870 per month,
about 22 percent of his or her final rate of pay. [6]
Thats much less than todays guaranteed benefit, recognizing that
some supplement may be offered under privatization plans.
Now suppose that the real rate of return is 4.5 percent per year, management
expenses are 1 percent, the worker is in the labor force only thirty-five years,
and the annuity costs 10 percent of the nest egg. In this very plausible case,
our worker will receive only $237 per month, or just 7 percent of his or her
final paycheck. [7]
That is well below what Social Security now offers. Such a plan also carries
tremendous risk, and not only from market fluctuations. Neither in this case,
nor in the best case, are there any provisions for survivors. An annuity that
offers survivor protection would offer monthly payments considerably lower than
these.
Advocates of individual accounts claim to be offering a windfall. But a full
accounting of their plans suggests they may be leading todays workers
simply to a long, painful fall.
CONCLUSION
Compound interest is a wonderful thing. If we gave up feeding our children dinner
and instead put $5 per day into a high-yielding account, it would be much easier
to pay for their college educations. It is not rocket science to recognize that
when we save money, instead of spending it today, it does build up. By the same
token, if we took all the money intended for current retirees and put it into
our own accounts, it would easily fund our retirement. But, to return to our
children, they would do poorly without dinner tonight. And our parents need
their pensions as well. Diverting payroll taxes to individual accounts would
starve the Social Security trust funds, hastening the day when they would be
exhausted.
If one downplays responsibilities to todays retirees and older workers,
assumes a high enough return on saving, ignores investment risk, ignores management
costs, ignores almost everything except compound interest, privatization of
Social Security can promise fabulous wealth. But this is no program, it is a
mirage.
Without sensational luck in stock returns, and great innovation in financial
markets, diverting two percentage points from Social Security payroll taxes
to establish private accounts would be entirely inadequate to meet future retirees
minimal needs. The result would be a combination of a gutted Social Security
system coupled with grossly inadequate private accounts. The idea that private
accounts would make us all rich is a siren song that can lead hardworking people
onto financial rocks that will shatter their retirement dreams.
NOTES
[1] As selected by Consumer Reports magazine in March
2001.
[2] Francis X. Cavanaugh, Statement before the Senate
Budget Committee, July 21, 1998.
[3] Professor Diamond believes that a market correction
followed by resumption of more rapid growth is a likely scenario. Such a correction
might take the form of a decade during which real stock prices would not increase.
[4] Think of an annuity as an upside-down life insurance
policy: instead of paying periodically for an uncertain number of years and
getting a lump sum in the end, with an annuity, the customer pays a lump sum
at the beginning to receive a stream of periodic payments of uncertain length.
[5] Without restrictions, for a given initial payment,
annuities would tend to offer men higher monthly income than women, and African
Americans higher income than white Americans. Annuity payments would vary inversely
with life expectancy.
[6] The best case is very unlikely; it assumes not only
that stock returns are high and costs minimal, but that 100 percent of the workers
assets are in stocks. In reality few would choose such a risky portfolio. A
lower share in stocks would mean lower average returns. It further assumes that
the annuity would continue to earn 7 percent, rather than reflecting a low-risk
strategy by the issuer of the annuity. The replacement rate is relative to earnings
at retirement.
[7] These figures pool all annuitants. If private insurers
could issue annuities differentiated by gender, then women, who live longer
than men on average, would receive only $837 and $225 in the best and realistic
cases, respectively. Men would receive more, $908 and $250, respectively. These
figures vary only life expectancy, assuming the same earning history for men
and women; in reality, women on average earn less per year than men and spend
fewer years in the paid labor force.
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