So You Think You’ve Got a Trust Fund With Your Uncle Sam . . .
by
John Attarian
One
of Social Security’s greatest myths is that benefits are paid from
a trust fund accumulated from taxes held in trust. True, there exist
an "Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund" and a
"Disability Insurance Trust Fund," usually referred to
together as "the Social Security Trust Fund." Sure it’s
a trust fund. Why, it says so right here on the label!
Or
is it?
The
original Social Security Act created an "Old-Age Reserve Account"
in the Treasury. Each year, an amount deemed sufficient to pay that
year’s benefits would be appropriated to the Account. Appropriations
unneeded for benefits would be invested in federal debt, including
unmarketable debt issued for this purpose, earning 3 percent. Social
Security’s tax rate was to rise gradually, to create a reserve big
enough so its interest would help defray future costs. Tax collections
would begin in 1937; benefit payouts, in 1942; thus the fund would
start accumulating.
Criticism
arose. Winthrop Aldrich of Chase National Bank argued that the reserve
would be a fiction; the government would just be issuing itself
promissory notes. In his famous Milwaukee speech on Social Security
during the 1936 presidential campaign, "Alf" Landon likened
the reserve to a father taking deductions from his kids’ wages to
invest for their old age, "investing" them in "his
own IOU," and spending the money, leaving his kids nothing
but IOUs, making Social Security’s forced savings "a cruel
hoax." Social Security tax dollars, President Franklin Roosevelt
retorted, "are held in a Government trust fund solely for the
social security of the workers."
After
the election, the attacks kept coming. General Hugh Johnson, former
head of the National Recovery Administration, and journalist John
T. Flynn, pointed out that unlike insurance companies, which invest
their premiums to build a reserve to pay claims by their insured,
the government was only issuing itself IOUs. So the reserve was
worthless. To pay future benefits, Americans would have to be taxed
again. Defenders responded that the IOU talk was misleading; aren’t
all private instruments, such as stocks and bonds, really IOUs,
their value depending on the resources and ethics of the issuing
firms?
In
1939 FDR proposed amending Social Security. In the ensuing congressional
hearings and debates, the reserve controversy exploded. Critics
accused the Administration of "embezzlement" and reiterated
that the reserve was just IOUs, so Americans would be taxed twice.
No, no, no, defenders shot back; no embezzlement was happening,
there wouldn’t be any double taxation, and the IOUs were the safest
investment there was government bonds. By now three years
old, the acrimonious controversy was hurting Social Security’s prestige.
The
1939 Amendments created an "Old-Age and Survivors Insurance
Trust Fund" at the Treasury. The record is clear that this
was done to end the reserve fund wrangle. Testifying before the
Senate Finance Committee on the Amendments, Social Security Board
chairman Arthur Altmeyer, when asked what the purpose of the trust
fund was, stated, "to allay the unwarranted fears of some people
who thought that Uncle Sam was embezzling the money."
Moreover,
the texts of the original Social Security Act regarding the Reserve
Account and of the 1939 Amendments regarding the Trust Fund are
virtually identical. Section 201 of the original Act, "Old-Age
Reserve Account," was replaced by a new Section 201, "Federal
Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund." The only real
change was the elimination of the specific annual appropriation
transferring revenues to the Reserve Fund. Instead, a sum equivalent
to Social security tax receipts "is hereby appropriated"
to the Trust Fund for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1941, "and
for each fiscal year thereafter." In other words, the money
now goes into the Fund automatically. The only other new features
were a Board of Trustees (Secretary of the Treasury, Secretary of
Labor, and Chairman of the Social Security Board) to manage the
Fund; replacement of 3 percent interest with the average rate on
interest-bearing federal debt; and paying money from the Fund to
the Treasury to defray Social Security administrative expenses.
Otherwise,
the Trust Fund operated just like the Reserve Account. In fact it
was the Reserve Account; the latter’s assets as of January 1, 1940
were transferred to the Trust Fund. The Account was, according to
the Act, "an account in the Treasury," and the Trust Fund,
per the Amendments, was "on the books of the Treasury,"
making the transfer a formality. Essentially, a shoebox full of
bonds just got relabeled.
The
evidence is clear: Social Security’s Trust Fund is a Treasury account,
nothing more. The "trust fund" label was a public relations
ploy to reassure the public that Social Security was trustworthy.
It worked. The reserve controversy faded away.
Is
the Trust Fund the real McCoy? Let’s see. A trust fund is money
or other property held in a trust, a trust being "A fiduciary
relationship with respect to property, subjecting the person by
whom the property is held to equitable duties to deal with the property
for the benefit of another person, which arises as a result of a
manifestation of an intention to create it." A trust must have
a "settlor," who creates the trust and puts property into
it; a "trustee" who manages it and holds legal title to
the property; a "beneficiary," who has equitable title
to the property, and for whom the trustee manages it; "terms
of trust," spelling out the trust’s purpose, the duties and
powers of the trustee(s); and, of course, property. (Charles E.
Rounds, Jr. and Eric Hayes, Loring:
A Trustee’s Handbook,) 8th ed., pp. 12,
5, 79; Gilbert Thomas Stephenson, Estates
and Trusts, 4th ed., pp. 6366).
Social
Security’s trust fund does not have these defining features.
Congress
is not the settlor. A settlor puts his own property into the trust,
which Congress did not do. And Section 201 of the Amendments did
not even mention the Board of Trustees having legal title to any
property. Down go two characteristics of a trust.
Also,
Section 201 said nothing about property because there isn’t
any. In Flemming v. Nestor, the Supreme Court ruled that
there are no accrued property rights to benefits. If you have no
property right to benefits, how can you have property in the trust
fund which supposedly pays them? Property in the trust fund implies
a property right to benefits, and vice versa. A trust manages property
on someone’s behalf. No property, no trust.
Suffolk
University law professor and trust expert Charles Rounds aptly summed
up: "Despite the term ‘trust,’ the Social Security system contains
nothing that remotely resembles the common law trust. There is no
segregation of assets, no equitable property rights, no private
right of enforcement (all characteristics of the common law trust).
It is merely a system of taxation and appropriation sprinkled with
trust terms to hide its true nature."
Finally,
consider how the Trust Fund operates. Social Security revenues go
into Treasury general revenue and are credited to the Fund as unmarketable
Treasury bonds. The Treasury pays benefits with general revenue,
debiting the Trust Fund an equivalent value of bonds. Any remaining
revenue finances general government, with an equivalent value of
bonds in the Trust Fund as Social Security’s "surplus."
(House Ways and Means Committee, 1998
Green Book, pp. 73, 75, 77). That’s a Treasury account in action,
not a trust fund.
Social
Security’s Trust Fund is bogus. Meaning the "robbing the trust
fund" issue is phony, too. Yet seniors buy it. Last night one
of my friends told me he’d tried to straighten out his 77-year-old
uncle, but the old boy just wouldn’t believe him. Even my Mom fell
for that "robbing the trust fund" baloney. Social Security’s
propagandists have programmed many Americans, especially seniors,
like Moonies. Deprogramming is imperative.
October
3, 2002
John
Attarian (send him mail)
is a writer in Ann Arbor, Michigan, with a Ph.D. in economics. His
book Social
Security: False Consciousness and Crisis, which treats the
myths and realities of Social Security in detail, has just been
published by Transaction Publishers.
Copyright
© 2002 by LewRockwell.com
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