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10/30/00
Social
Security Privatization Good for Taxpayers, the Economy, the World
Privatization would provide trillions in new investment capital for
U.S., world markets
WASHINGTON-
Gov.
George W. Bush's plan to allow American workers the option of choosing
to contribute up to two percentage points of their payroll taxes to
personal accounts would be a boon to both the U.S economy and the
world economy a taxpayer group announced today.
According
to Americans for Tax Reform, FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions
Act) taxes paid in 1998 totaled $513.9 billion dollars.
Under Gov. Bush's plan, if everyone who could participate in
his plan chose to do so, that would result in $82.7 billion being
invested into the U.S. economy and, to a lesser degree, the world
economy.
According
to Investors Business Daily, any plan that includes private accounts
for Social Security will create trillions of dollars of investment
capital for businesses over the next two decades.
The result? More
jobs, lower inflation, and an increase in the standard of living.
But
all of these benefits would not be for retirees.
They would also benefit the youngest generation of the workforce,
providing them more opportunities to acquire wealth over their working
careers.
According
to Wade Dokken, chief executive of American Skandia, "short of war,
no issue the next president can affect will touch the lives of the
American people more than reforming Social Security.
This is important because real growth in the economy and productivity
is directly related to the availability of capital and the cost of
capital."
Martin
Feldstein, president of Nation Bureau of Economic Research, said shifting
a part of Social Security to the private economy could make a huge
difference. Feldstein
estimates that in 2000, private savings using a plan such as Gov.
Bush's would be about $80 billion.