Posted on 12/05/2005 12:01:51 PM PST by libertarianPA
KERNERSVILLE, N.C. - President Bush called on American businesses on Monday to live up to their pension promises, saying too many companies are not putting away enough money to protect the retirement benefits of their workers.
"My message to corporate America is you need to fulfill your promises," Bush said. "When you say to a worker, `This is what they're going get when they retire,' you better put enough money in the account to make sure the worker gets that what you said."
In a speech on the economy, the president said federal rules governing pensions are confusing and misleading and allow companies to technically play by the rules without funding the promises they make. In the end, taxpayers wind up footing the bill because of federal pension insurance, he said.
"So Congress needs to straighten up these rules," Bush said. Members of his economic team said pension-reform legislation moving through Congress is not tough enough. "And I'm not going to sign a bill that weakens pension funding for the American workers," Bush said.
The president made his remarks in a speech before a friendly audience at the Deere-Hitachi Construction Machinery Corp. in Kernersville, N.C.
Trying to calm Americans' anxieties about the economy, Bush said the economy is growing and added 215,000 jobs in November. He called on Congress to extend tax cuts that are due to expire, and urged passage of long-pending health and energy legislation.
"This economy is strong and the best days are yet to come for the American economy," Bush said.
Bush's approval on handling the economy was at 37 percent in an AP-Ipsos poll in early November, the lowest rating yet on the economy. More recent public polls have shown a solid majority of Americans have a pessimistic view of the health of the economy these days despite signs that it has been gaining strength after blows delivered by the hurricanes this fall and a spike in energy prices.
But public opinion analysts have suggested that uncertainty about the war in Iraq is affecting the public's mood in other areas, such as their view of the economy.
The administration went on a public relations offensive, with Treasury Secretary John Snow and Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez planning speeches on the economy later this week. Snow, Gutierrez and Labor Secretary Elaine Chao wrote a Nov. 21 op-ed piece in The New York Times about pensions problems.
The article said legislation emerging from Senate negotiations would relax rather than strengthen funding rules for pensions, while a bill moving through the House was weakened by the long transition period it allows before tighter funding requirements take effect.
"Unless these bills are strengthened, they could result in weaker pension funding that increases the potential that workers will lose benefits and taxpayers will have to bail out the pension insurance program," the article said.
"It's no secret that some companies don't want to pay more to support their pension promises," the article by Chao, Snow and Gutierrez said. "It's also no secret that labor unions would rather bargain for new wages than ask companies to fund benefits their members already have."
"But even if the pension insurance system picks up the bill if promises can't be kept, rank-and-file workers and potentially taxpayers ultimately pay the price for this behavior; just ask any United Airlines retiree whose pension was reduced to the maximum federal guarantee," the article said.
"Similarly, responsible employers are harmed, because their insurance premiums must be increased to pay off the pension insurance agency's deficit," the article said. "We must not kick this problem down the road by extending that temporary relief while further postponing reforms. The problem continues to grow and more workers' pensions are at risk."
LOL. You beat me to it.
Bush has at least tried to get some meaningful reform of social security. He can't just dictate that the reforms be implemented, and you can be darn sure the democrats won't allow anything that might weaken their grip on all the folks they want to keep dependant on Uncle Sam's largesse.
This is a state matter under the Constitution, not a federal matter.
No kidding; yet another federal program jammed through the Commerce Clause with the ramrod of the Necessary and Proper Clause.
"Hello? Kettle? This is George Bush. You're black!"
And since one is broken, we should ignore it all?
Or maybe this is an attempt to fix SOMETHING?
-Sun Tzu
So... why did we win both houses of Congress AND the White House again?
I fail to see an attempt to fix anything.
Seems so.
HR 2380 calls for fully funded pension funds and a RAISE in the federal insurance premiums. Something seems wrong with this picture.
The only pension plans not in any real danger of collasping are government workers pension plans. All they need to do is raise more taxes to cover the shortfall.
We would be OK with a conservative in the Whitehouse, but we have Jorge Arbusto the last of the great Rockefeller Republicans.
Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.
I don't begrudge the President, but then I don't think he ever claimed to be a true conservative. I think it is clear that he is a moderate. Almost makes me want to stay home on election day......
Bad idea. I'll take a moderate over a leftie any day of the week. Lesser of two evils, marginal benefit, etc.
I used to think that way. But I am beginning to think that the quicker we let the lefties destroy this nation, the quicker we will get to fix it. Why allow the right to get blamed for the moderate destruction?
Keep in mind that my criticism stems from domestic issues only, I have no issue with the handling of WOT by GWB.
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