Posted on 11/29/2008 11:41:32 AM PST by DivaDelMar
RALEIGH â Democrats in the U.S. House have been conducting hearings on proposals to confiscate workersâ personal retirement accounts â including 401(k)s and IRAs â and convert them to accounts managed by the Social Security Administration.
Triggered by the financial crisis the past two months, the hearings reportedly were meant to stem losses incurred by many workers and retirees whose 401(k) and IRA balances have been shrinking rapidly.
The testimony of Teresa Ghilarducci, professor of economic policy analysis at the New School for Social Research in New York, in hearings Oct. 7 drew the most attention and criticism. Testifying for the House Committee on Education and Labor, Ghilarducci proposed that the government eliminate tax breaks for 401(k) and similar retirement accounts, such as IRAs, and confiscate workersâ retirement plan accounts and convert them to universal Guaranteed Retirement Accounts (GRAs) managed by the Social Security Administration.
Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., chairman of the House Committee on Education and Labor, in prepared remarks for the hearing on âThe Impact of the Financial Crisis on Workersâ Retirement Security,â blamed Wall Street for the financial crisis and said his committee will âstrengthen and protect Americansâ 401(k)s, pensions, and other retirement plansâ and the âDemocratic Congress will continue to conduct this much-needed oversight on behalf of the American people.â
Currently, 401(k) plans allow Americans to invest pretax money and their employers match up to a defined percentage, which not only increases workersâ retirement savings but also reduces their annual income tax. The balances are fully inheritable, subject to income tax, meaning workers pass on their wealth to their heirs, unlike Social Security. Even when they leave an employer and go to one that doesnât offer a 401(k) or pension, workers can transfer their balances to a qualified IRA.
Mandating Equality
Ghilarducciâs plan first appeared in a paper for the Economic Policy Institute: Agenda for Shared Prosperity on Nov. 20, 2007, in which she said GRAs will rescue the flawed American retirement income system (www.sharedprosperity.org/bp204/bp204.pdf).
The current retirement system, Ghilarducci said, âexacerbates income and wealth inequalitiesâ because tax breaks for voluntary retirement accounts are âskewed to the wealthy because it is easier for them to save, and because they receive bigger tax breaks when they do.â
Lauding GRAs as a way to effectively increase retirement savings, Ghilarducci wrote that savings incentives are unequal for rich and poor families because tax deferrals âprovide a much larger âcarrotâ to wealthy families than to middle-class families â and none whatsoever for families too poor to owe taxes.â
GRAs would guarantee a fixed 3 percent annual rate of return, although later in her article Ghilarducci explained that participants would not âearn a 3% real return in perpetuity.â In place of tax breaks workers now receive for contributions and thus a lower tax rate, workers would receive $600 annually from the government, inflation-adjusted. For low-income workers whose annual contributions are less than $600, the government would deposit whatever amount it would take to equal the minimum $600 for all participants.
In a radio interview with Kirby Wilbur in Seattle on Oct. 27, 2008, Ghilarducci explained that her proposal doesnât eliminate the tax breaks, rather, âIâm just rearranging the tax breaks that are available now for 401(k)s and spreading â spreading the wealth.â
All workers would have 5 percent of their annual pay deducted from their paychecks and deposited to the GRA. They would still be paying Social Security and Medicare taxes, as would the employers. The GRA contribution would be shared equally by the worker and the employee. Employers no longer would be able to write off their contributions. Any capital gains would be taxable year-on-year.
Analysts point to another disturbing part of the plan. With a GRA, workers could bequeath only half of their account balances to their heirs, unlike full balances from existing 401(k) and IRA accounts. For workers who die after retiring, they could bequeath just their own contributions plus the interest but minus any benefits received and minus the employer contributions.
Another justification for Ghilarducciâs plan is to eliminate investment risk. In her testimony, Ghilarducci said, âhumans often lack the foresight, discipline, and investing skills required to sustain a savings plan.â She cited the 2004 HSBC global survey on the Future of Retirement, in which she claimed that âa third of Americans wanted the government to force them to save more for retirement.â
What the survey actually reported was that 33 percent of Americans wanted the government to âenforce additional private savings,â a vastly different meaning than mandatory government-run savings. Of the four potential sources of retirement support, which were government, employer, family, and self, the majority of Americans said âselfâ was the most important contributor, followed by âgovernment.â When broken out by family income, low-income U.S. households said the âgovernmentâ was the most important retirement support, whereas high-income families ranked âgovernmentâ last and âselfâ first (www.hsbc.com/retirement).
On Oct. 22, The Wall Street Journal reported that the Argentinean government had seized all private pension and retirement accounts to fund government programs and to address a ballooning deficit. Fearing an economic collapse, foreign investors quickly pulled out, forcing the Argentinean stock market to shut down several times. More than 10 years ago, nationalization of private savings sent Argentinaâs economy into a long-term downward spiral.
Income and Wealth Redistribution
The majority of witness testimony during recent hearings before the House Committee on Education and Labor showed that congressional Democrats intend to address income and wealth inequality through redistribution.
On July 31, 2008, Robert Greenstein, executive director of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, testified before the subcommittee on workforce protections that âfrom the standpoint of equal treatment of people with different incomes, there is a fundamental flawâ in tax code incentives because they are âprovided in the form of deductions, exemptions, and exclusions rather than in the form of refundable tax credits.â
Even people who donât pay taxes should get money from the government, paid for by higher-income Americans, he said. âThere is no obvious reason why lower-income taxpayers or people who do not file income taxes should get smaller incentives (or no tax incentives at all),â Greenstein said.
âMoving to refundable tax credits for promoting socially worthwhile activities would be an important step toward enhancing progressivity in the tax code in a way that would improve economic efficiency and performance at the same time,â Greenstein said, and âreducing barriers to labor organizing, preserving the real value of the minimum wage, and the other workforce security concerns . . . would contribute to an economy with less glaring and sharply widening inequality.â
When asked whether committee members seriously were considering Ghilarducciâs proposal for GSAs, Aaron Albright, press secretary for the Committee on Education and Labor, said Miller and other members were listening to all ideas.
Millerâs biggest priority has been on legislation aimed at greater transparency in 401(k)s and other retirement plan administration, specifically regarding fees, Albright said, and he sent a link to a Fox News interview of Miller on Oct. 24, 2008, to show that the congressman had not made a decision.
After repeated questions asked by Neil Cavuto of Fox News, Miller said he would not be in favor of âkilling the 401(k)â or of âkilling the tax advantages for 401(k)s.â
Arguing against liberal prescriptions, William Beach, director of the Center for Data Analysis at the Heritage Foundation, testified on Oct. 24 that the âroots of the current crisis are firmly planted in public policy mistakesâ by the Federal Reserve and Congress. He cautioned Congress against raising taxes, increasing burdensome regulations, or withdrawing from international product or capital markets. âCongress can ill afford to repeat the awesome errors of its predecessor in the early days of the Great Depression,â Beach said.
Instead, Beach said, Congress could best address the financial crisis by making the tax reductions of 2001 and 2003 permanent, stopping dependence on demand-side stimulus, lowering the corporate profits tax, and reducing or eliminating taxes on capital gains and dividends.
Testifying before the same committee in early October, Jerry Bramlett, president and CEO of BenefitStreet, Inc., an independent 401(k) plan administrator, said one of the best ways to ensure retirement security would be to have the U.S. Department of Labor develop educational materials for workers so they could make better investment decisions, not exchange equity investments in retirement accounts for Treasury bills, as proposed in the GSAs.
Should Sen. Barack Obama win the presidency, congressional Democrats might have stronger support for their âspreading the wealthâ agenda. On Oct. 27, the American Thinker posted a video of an interview with Obama on public radio station WBEZ-FM from 2001.
In the interview, Obama said, âThe Supreme Court never ventured into the issues of redistribution of wealth, and of more basic issues such as political and economic justice in society.â The Constitution says only what âthe states canât do to you. Says what the Federal government canât do to you,â and Obama added that the Warren Court wasnât that radical.
Although in 2001 Obama said he was not âoptimistic about bringing major redistributive change through the courts,â as president, he would likely have the opportunity to appoint one or more Supreme Court justices.
âThe real tragedy of the civil rights movement was, um, because the civil rights movement became so court focused that I think there was a tendency to lose track of the political and community organizing and activities on the ground that are able to put together the actual coalition of powers through which you bring about redistributive change,â Obama said.
Karen McMahan is a contributing editor of Carolina Journal.
>>This is old news. I still dont think they can confiscate our private savings (401Ks).
They didn’t think FDR would shut the banks down either. I would be wary of thinking that Versailles can’t do anything.
Of course, this will lead to Civil War - or slavery.
But they can tax them look at what they did with IRA’s IRA’s were just like 401K’s back in the 1980’s. Tip O’Neil came in and said that they were a vehicle for the rich and the IRA’s went away and they were brought back some time later in the form of a 401k.
I’m not so sure there will be an outcry, rather I think the same idiots who elected Obama will embrace this.
Think about it for a moment. Those are the same people who believe, erroneously, that the government should take care of them.
I wouldn’t be so worried if I didn’t believe the words of Rahm Emanuel:
Rule one: Never allow a crisis to go to waste, Mr. Emanuel said in an interview on Sunday. They are opportunities to do big things.
They will use this financial crisis to herd the sheople into Communism. Mark my words. They aren’t “fasciest bastards” they are COMMUNIST BASTARDS.
"They" are Obama and his wealth-spreading Democrat pals in Congress, and if "they" have a filibuster proof Senate for the next two years, "they" can do any #@$%^#* they want to.
Well, let’s see...a DhimmiRat President, a DhimmiRat House and DhimmiRat Senate... They can pretty much do what they want, until the people challenge them, forcibly if necessary.
This socialist claptrap needs to be stopped, and quickly. I read somewhere that there has not been a rolling twenty-year period since the start of the twentieth century in which the stock markets didn’t advance. So, why are these communists trying to take over our PRIVATE retirement funds over this near term market correction?
Admittedly, the market has suffered. BUT...the damage done has been a result of the LibTards ramming the CRA down the throats of lenders, for starters.
I’d rather they just get the hell out of the economy, altogether. They’ve managed to muck it up completely. WHY would we think they are the same folks to fix it? Sounds like a classic example of the definition of insanity...
I don’t think we’ll get any notice or choice in the matter. That’s why I am seriously considering pulling every penny out of my 401(k) and IRA. Yes, I’ll take a terrible tax hit, but I’d rather have something left rather than nothing.
You’re not going to get any choice or notice. I think we have to be proactive here and let our elected “representatives” know that we will not stand for this under any circumstance.
Two honorable justices objected to SS on 10th Amendment grounds. They also rejected “general welfare” baloney out of hand.
FDR's threat of court packing had the desired effect. Much of his New Deal passed court muster.
A pubbie would have been impeached several times over had he tried similar intimidation of Scotus.
I don't think that they'd be fool enough to try it.
If only 1% of the folks affected were crazies and 1% of those decided to "do something about it", there'd be a lot of hell to pay in DC. They know it.
Why did the American people turn in their gold in the 30’s? The government told them it was for their own good, for their protection, etc.
The country is unnerved. I’m betting the vast majority of the citizens will embrace this because they believe the LIE that the government can or will take care of them.
One needs to look no further than the unfunded liabilities of Socialist Insecurity and Mediscare to know that is patently false.
You seem to forget that the country elected a man who promised nothing more substantive than “hope” and “change”.
The idiots are running the asylum. We are outnumbered. I believe the majority of my fellow Americans will embrace this.
And the people should have staged an armed uprising then. But they didn't.
Oh really??
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/search?m=all;o=time;q=quick;s=Dems%20Target
only about 20 posts of it in various forms...
They should have, they didn’t and we’re even more acquiescent now.
My 33-year-old daughter refuses to believe this.
I used quotes around the entire title. Didn’t return any hits.
Again where the Republicans?
This should be a major issue in the Georgia Senate race.
Chambliss has a made to order issue.
I keep wondering what will be the tipping point for decent American people. Another Boston Tea Party is way overdue. Maybe this will be the catalyst.
All those Obammy voters wanted change, well here it comes!
You think wrongly.
L
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