A Bird's Eye View of the Social Security Debate
IB#25
Introduction
President Bush plans to use his political capital to "privatize" a
portion of the Social Security program. Whether or not such a change is
desirable and the extent to which it solves Social Security's financing
problems will dominate much of the policy agenda over the next few
years. This Issue in Brief is intended to highlight the key points in
the debate. First, it documents the magnitude of the Social Security
financing problem. An enormous problem may justify a complete
restructuring, while a more modest problem may call for marginal
adjustments. Second, it clarifies that the privatization debate usually
encompasses two separate issues - how to close Social Security's
financing gap and how to structure benefits. Third, it addresses the
slightly esoteric, but quite important issue, of how to account for the
higher expected returns earned on more risky assets. The conclusion, to
the extent that one emerges from this overview, is that the issues are
extremely complicated and that solving Social Security's solvency
problem requires serious decisions - rather than a silver bullet...
For full paper in PDF (translated into Chinese)
Alicia H. Munnell is the director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College and the Peter F. Drucker Professor of Management Sciences at Boston College's Carroll School of Management. The author thanks Francesca Golub-Sass for excellent research assistance.


