Bush's Market-Liberal Scam
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
President Bush
began his second term with a big push for "Social Security privatization."
I put the words in quotes to point out that neither his plan, nor
any mainstream plan, is actual privatization. What he proposed was
the gradual replacement of a publicly funded welfare program – those
premiums you pay are really just taxes – with a mandatory private
scheme.
Before we go
on, let me explain. Let's say the government provided you lunch
every day. The food was bad and the price for taxpayers was sky
high. So instead, some Beltway policy wonk suggests that government
not do this anymore. To be sure, lunch will be eaten. In fact, government
will force you to both pay for and eat lunch. To assure its quality,
government will designate certain spots where you will eat. It will
have authorized restaurants and meal packages.
The plan is
proposed by people calling themselves "market liberals." They say
it is a step in the right direction, toward freedom. From the point
of view of everyone else, what do you think? It's not like you can
now skip lunch and save the money. And who can't but notice that
there is a large sector of lunch-providers that now have a stake
in the program? The lunch business is being subsidized in a big
way. We might even say that the previously private lunch industry
has been nationalized.
I'll stop the
analogy there without discussing what happens when the lunches deliver
food poisoning, and there is an inevitable public outrage. Here
we can move directly to the real world. Let's say Bush had actually
achieved his goal of creating private accounts that you are forced
to contribute to, and a sizeable swath of the American public had
invested in safe mutual funds spread across many sectors.
What would
have been the result? Look at the
state of the financial markets.
The Bush administration
would have holy Hell to pay. The public would have turned against
the "market liberals" who gave us this scam. Capitalism would have
been denounced as having generated yet another shock-therapy failure.
Investment standards would have been ever more regulated. The companies
that held most of the "private" funds would be declared too big
to fail. The sub-prime bailout would have become a full-bore stock
market bailout. This would have been declared the ultimate failure
of free markets.
I think we
can be pleased that Bush was unable to muster public enthusiasm
for the program. And why wasn't he? Not because it would have still
resulted in a forced program. That wasn't the issue, even if it
should have been one issue. There were the inevitable fears that
Bush's program would lead to cuts in Social Security payments. But
more important, news began to leak out that the Bush administration
hadn't been wholly honest about the transition costs of switching
from a socialist to a fascist system. Indeed, none of the advocates
of phony privatization have been honest about this.
Here's the
problem. Those paying massive taxes into the system now are also
paying the current receivers of Social Security. Once you cut away
the rhetoric and fancy finance, it works exactly like a regular
welfare program, taxing you to pay him. The outlays are growing
exponentially, having doubled in ten years to the point that it
rivals the budget for war and empire. To divert the incoming funds
to some other project would blast an amazing hole in the budget,
which would have to be covered by taxes or debt or inflation. We
are talking here about perhaps $12 trillion, so this is a serious
matter. Is it any wonder that neither the advocates of faux-privatization
nor the Bush administration want to talk about this?
Just raising
the subject of the transition exposes the whole lie of the system.
It is not social insurance. We are not paying premiums, which we
later collect as an income stream. Current recipients are collecting
current taxes. Just realizing that – and focusing on the transition
prompts such a realization – gets to the heart of the Social Security
lie.
People ask
what is the way out? There is the easy answer – abolish it completely
and instantly – or Ron Paul's more politically viable answer, which
would permit current payers to opt out of the system completely.
Those who opt out surrender all claims on future benefits. The current
recipients could be paid. Yes, this would cause a financial crisis,
and probably prompt a rethinking of the ridiculous idea that people
ought to retire at 65, which is very young by today's standards.
Moreover, there would be two giant steps in the right direction:
the majority would be completely free from the Social Security stranglehold,
and it would be suddenly obvious that the system is a transfer program
pure and simple.
All that aside,
what Bush decided to do, in the end, was nothing at all. That's
a terrible choice until you consider what he might have done. It's
hard to be grateful for anything during the Bush presidency, but
the failure of a phony privatization that would have discredited
free markets is one.
March
13, 2008
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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