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Chile's Social Security Lesson For The U.S.

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Post by TexasBlue Fri Sep 16, 2011 7:40 pm

Chile's Social Security Lesson For The U.S.

José Piñera
Investor's Business Daily
December 17, 1997


This article appeared in Investor's Business Daily on December 17, 1997.

America's Social Security system will go bust in 2010. As political leaders scramble to save it, they've overlooked an obvious free-market solution that works. They need only look at Chile.

Pay-as-you-go social security systems destroy the link between contributions and benefits, between effort and reward. Everyone tries to minimize what he puts into the system while trying to maximize through political pressure what he can get out of it. That's why pay-as-you-go plans are going bankrupt all over the world.

Chile faced that problem in the late '70s. As secretary of labor and social security, I could have postponed the crisis by playing at the edges, increasing payroll taxes a little and slashing benefits a little. But instead of making some cosmetic adjustments, I decided to undertake a structural reform that would solve the problem once and for all.

We decided to save the idea of a retirement plan by basing it on a completely different concept -- one that links benefits and contributions.

Chile allowed every worker to choose whether to stay in the state-run, pay-as-you-go social security system or to put the whole payroll tax into an individual retirement account. For the first time in history we have allowed the common worker to benefit from one of the most powerful forces on earth: compound interest.

Some 93% of Chilean workers chose the new system. They trust the private sector and prefer market risk to political risk. If you invest money in the market, it could go up or down. Over a 40-year period, though, a diversified portfolio will have very low risk and provide a positive rate of real return. But when the government runs the pension system, it can slash benefits at any time.

The Chilean system is run completely by private companies. We now have 15 mutual funds competing for workers' savings.

We guaranteed benefits for the elderly -- we told those people who had already retired that they had nothing to fear from this reform. We also told people entering the labor force for the first time that they had to go to the new system.

Today, all workers in Chile are capitalists, because their money is invested in the stock market. And they also understand that if government tomorrow were to create the conditions for inflation, they would be damaged because some of the money is also invested in bonds -- around 60%. So the whole working population of Chile has a vested interest in sound economic policies and a pro-market, pro-private-enterprise environment.

There have been enormous external benefits: the savings rate of Chile was 10% of gross national product traditionally. It has gone up to 27% of GNP. The payroll tax in Chile is zero. Of course we have an estate tax and an income tax, but not a payroll tax. With full employment and a 27% savings rate, the rate of growth of the Chilean economy has doubled.

That does not mean that we do not have any problems in Chile, but I believe that a society based on individual freedoms -- economic, social and political -- is a much more prosperous and lively society.

Could something like this be done in the U.S.? People have said it's utopian and that nobody in the establishment would support privatization, but I believe the situation is changing.

Recently, I was invited by Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, to testify before the Senate Subcommittee on Securities. Basically, everyone agreed that a system like this is much more consistent with American values than a system created by a Prussian chancellor in the 19th century.

Of course, that does not mean that the reform will be done in the next month or the next year. I believe there's still a lot of education yet to go. But there's also a great opportunity here, and I think it's a very responsible thing to give your children and grandchildren.

José Piñera is Chile's former secretary of labor and social security and is co-chairman of the Cato Institute's Project on Social Security Privatization.
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Post by TexasBlue Fri Sep 16, 2011 7:41 pm

13 years later, he seems to have nailed the demise of SSA but only slightly. Imagine that.
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Post by dblboggie Fri Sep 16, 2011 8:21 pm

It is just insane that we don't have system like this! Of course, such a system would rob our politicians of some of their precious power over our lives.
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Post by TexasBlue Fri Sep 16, 2011 9:35 pm

dblboggie wrote:It is just insane that we don't have system like this! Of course, such a system would rob our politicians of some of their precious power over our lives.

What I don't understand is how the population would rather keep going down the road we're on (gov't forced at that) rather than having it in their own hands.
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Post by dblboggie Fri Sep 16, 2011 10:22 pm

TexasBlue wrote:
dblboggie wrote:It is just insane that we don't have system like this! Of course, such a system would rob our politicians of some of their precious power over our lives.

What I don't understand is how the population would rather keep going down the road we're on (gov't forced at that) rather than having it in their own hands.

I believe we can thank those government indoctrination centers we call "public schools" for the ignorance of our population on such things as the proper and constitutional role of government and basic economics. And to add to that we have the modern version of bread-and-circuses in our sports and entertainment industries to distract the population from the things that really matter.

It's sad really, the American people have been reduced to little more than slaves to the government.
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Post by TexasBlue Sat Sep 17, 2011 4:43 am

The sad part is that people know it and accept it as "just the way it is" and that "it won't change." Well, I intend to do my part to change it.
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Post by dblboggie Sat Sep 17, 2011 6:09 pm

TexasBlue wrote:The sad part is that people know it and accept it as "just the way it is" and that "it won't change." Well, I intend to do my part to change it.

I spent about 15 years trying to change it directly on the Hill, most of which was devoted to getting the Fair Tax implemented.
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