Ohio Retirees Oppose Social Security Private Accounts or Reduction in Congressional Support
Thursday, October 23, 2008
For Immediate Release
October 23,
2008
Contact: Norm Wernet (614) 271-
4975
nwernet@retiredamericans.org
Ohio
Retirees Oppose Social
Security Private Accounts or Reduction in
Congressional Support
The
following is a statement released today by Ohio
Alliance for Retired Americans
President David Friesner and State Director
Norman Wernet
Social Security
and Ohio Retirees
The Alliance for
Retired Americans opposes private
accounts and the current proposals to privatize
the Social Security pension and
disability protection system. We are concerned
about the discussion being initiated
that proposes cuts and means testing in Social
Security and its various programs. On
principle these proposals are aimed at breaking
apart one of the few economic
mechanisms of social cohesion and stability in
our country.
Social Security has been successful as a floor
for working men and women and their
families. We agree with the real need to
increase personal savings for retirement but
private Social Security accounts are not the
way. We believe that defined benefit
pensions would be a more efficient means to
accomplish savings for retirement
through aggregate investing and would provide
more stability for the financial
markets.
For the average person in Ohio,
Social Security it means a stable
income of around $ 12,000 a year, not a lot and
certainly below the recent self-
sufficiency standard established by the Ohio
Community Action agencies studies
earlier this year. Here in Franklin County that
is $17,652 for a single adult. The self-
sufficiency income need to survive in for one
adult is $16,112 in Stark Co or $18097
in Summit Co, $14,647 in Belmont Co, $15,861 in
Hardin Co, and $16,232 in Preble
Co.
Ohio Institute for Women’s Policy
Research found the median income
for women over 65 to be below $12,500. A
reduction or cut in the cost of living
adjustment in Social Security would quickly
place Ohio’s older women further at risk.
Men over 65, by the way are not much better off
with median income of below
$21,500. The median income for a household over
65 is just under $25,000
according to census figures.
Freezing
the Social Security Cost of Living
Adjustment as part of a deficit reduction
strategy would have profound effects on our
communities. This year’s Social Security COLA
of $2.7 million dollars per month may
not boost the economy of Trumbull County but
its withdrawal would certainly
hurt.
What one of us can save enough
money to protect our families if a
spouse dies during our working years? Some of
us have experienced this personally.
Social Security was there for our family to
help a spouse into the workforce and
provide an education for orphaned children.
Have any of us saved enough to counter
the effect of a work life ending
disability?
The threat to our Social
Insurance is that division and segmentation
breeds more desire for division and
segmentation. Those that have wealth resent
paying for those that have less and
those who have less resent paying for those
locked out of the economy. We see that
at work every day and are hearing it constantly
on talk radio. The corrosion of
societal cohesion is what Social Security
worked to resolve in the depths of an
economic depression and brought us into
prosperity and life after a life of
work.
Social Security has worked as one
part of a mechanism to hold
society together and bridge those divides. It
is a means of knitting generations
together and creating a vision of the abundance
we have and the ways to share it.
Certainly it is better to share that abundance
through meaningful and productive
work. But our market system has not been
producing very well for most of us these
days. Social Security is one stable
factor.
Those of us who are retired from
the active workforce are not a disposable
commodity, We are the generation that
created the idea of productivity and did it. We
became the most productive workforce
in the world and transformed the idea of the
modern city and suburb into a reality.
We created the great American consumer economy.
We want to continue to live into
that reality as long as possible, spending our
incomes where we
live.
Placing us all at the risk of the
market place does not seem a wise or
prudent thing to do.
