Well since the system was seriously insolvent, the alternative was cutting the benefits -- where the poor and middle class get proportionally much more bang for the buck. So it is more accurately a forced saving system, not a tax.
And talk about fuzzy math 8.2% + 9.5% is a total tax rate of 17.7% (assuming for the sake of argument that SS is actually a tax and not a savings plan). By 1988 the total was 6.6% and 11.8% which is a total of 18.4%. So we are arguing about a 0.7% of income increase to maintain their SS benefit. Puhlease! Originally Posted by pjorourke
What I argue is that the surplue in SS made us NOT look at either curbing spending or increasing taxes to pay for DEFENSE increases and other spending to be fair.
Smoke and mirrors PJ, smoke and mirrors.