The Right Opinion
Entitlement Reforms
For those of us who like to believe that human beings are rational, trying to explain what happens in politics can be a real challenge.
For example, that segment of the population that has the least to fear from a reform of Medicare or Social Security is the most fearful -- namely, those already receiving Medicare or Social Security benefits.
It is understandable that people heavily dependent on these programs would fear losing their benefits, especially after a lifetime of paying into these programs. But nobody in his right mind has even proposed taking away the benefits of those who are already receiving them.
Yet opponents of reforming these programs have managed repeatedly to scare the daylights out of seniors with wild claims and television ads such as one showing someone -- who looks somewhat like Paul Ryan -- pushing an elderly lady in a wheelchair toward a cliff and then dumping her over.
There are people who take seriously such statements as those by President Barack Obama that Republicans want to "end Medicare as we know it."
Let's stop and think, if only for the novelty of it. If you make any change in anything, you are ending it "as we know it." Does that mean that everything in the status quo should be considered to be set in concrete forever?
If there were not a single Republican, or none who got elected to any office, arithmetic would still end "Medicare as we know it," for the simple reason that the money in the till is not enough to keep paying for it. The same is true of Social Security.
The same has been true of welfare state programs in European countries that are currently struggling with both financial crises and riots in the streets from people who feel betrayed by their governments. They have in fact been betrayed by their politicians, who have promised them things that there was not enough money to pay for. That is the basic problem in the United States as well.
We are not yet Greece, but we are not exempt from the same rules of arithmetic that eventually caught up with Greece. We just have a little more time. The only question is whether we will use that time to make politically difficult changes or whether we will just kick the can down the road, and keep pretending that "Medicare as we know it" would continue on indefinitely, if it were not for people who just want to be mean to the elderly.
In both Europe and America, there are many people who get angry at those who tell them the truth that the money is just not there to sustain huge welfare state programs indefinitely. But that anger might be better directed at those who lied to them by promising them benefits that were inherently unsustainable.
Neither Social Security nor Medicare has ever had enough assets to cover its liabilities. Very simply, there has never been enough money put aside to do what the government promised to do.
These systems operate on what their advocates like to call a "pay as you go" basis. That is, the younger generation pays in money that is used to cover the cost of benefits for the older generation. This is the kind of financial pyramid scheme that got Charles Ponzi put in prison in the 1920s and got Bernie Madoff put in prison in our times.
A private annuity cannot play these financial games without its executives risking the fate of Ponzi and Madoff. That is why proposed Social Security and Medicare reforms would allow young people to put their money somewhere where the money they pay in would be put aside specifically for them, not used as at present to pay older people's pensions, with anything left over being used for whatever else politicians feel like spending the money on.
It is today's young people who are going to be left holding the bag when they reach retirement age and discover that all the money they paid in is long gone. It is today's young people who are going to be dumped over a cliff when they reach retirement age, if nothing is done to reform entitlements.
Yet the young seem not to be nearly as alarmed as the elderly, who have no real reason to fear. Try reconciling that with the belief that human beings are rational.
COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM

8 Comments
mark in massachusetts
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 at 8:36 AM
If the young people who have graduated from college in the last three years think that re-electing Obama is a good idea then they wasted 4 years of their lives. They are now dumber than when they finished high school.Dems like Liz Warren here in Massachusetts harp about the 'burden' these kids have with college loans hanging over them like the sword of Damacles.They cannot be relied upon to make a sound judgement when it comes to this election any more than the bottom 49% of the population who pay no taxes.The gene pool is drying up and we are in reverse.The Republicans should tell Romney to stop pussy-footing around and go for the jugular! Maybe Eric Fuhrstrom should move on to another position.He apparently is in over his head.
Old Sarge in Hinesville, GA
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 at 11:11 AM
If our education system dumb's down anymore, then there won't be any reason for anyone to go to school. Bring back programs that teach a trade and quit thinking that everyone needs a college degree. When seniors graduate from high school and can't even fill out a job application correctly then they certainly didn't get an education. Too many feel good programs and not enough basic skills are being taught these days.
Rod in USA
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 at 12:35 PM
We need to include in any reform the concept that medicare and medicaid are insurance meant to cover catastrophic issues like heart disease, auto accident injuries and cancer. Checkups and routine procedures should not be covered, but should be paid out of pocket. I totally understand the logic that preventive measures can lessen the cost overall by catching or preventing the catastrophic issues "early". However, it is a slippery slope that leads us into dialog about the "necessity" of covering all forms of birth control, measures which truly should be the responsibility of the individual, not society. Don't ask me to underwrite your right to engage in promiscuous or dangerous behaviors.
Tort reform and competition across state lines (aka, "portability") need to be included as well to help drive down costs.
This is the way that health care could have been made affordable to more Americans in the first place. It has the side benefit of also ensuring a business environment that does not discourage our brightest young folks from investing 8+ years of post-bachelor education to become a doctor.
Tex Horn in Texas
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 at 1:44 PM
Mr. Sowell, thank you, good sir. For what? Logic and reason. There's a dearth of it in our country today.
JAC in Texas
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 at 4:15 PM
It is beyond all understanding as to why the Republicans don't just get up in front of a crowd and read this article, or at the very least, paraphrase it. I'm sure Thomas Sowell wouldn't invoke his copyright priveleges. On the other hand, the news media wouldn't cover it anyway, and the people in the crowd wouldn't have the attention span to pay attention, or wouldn't be the ones that need to hear it.
sunforester in left coast
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 at 9:47 PM
Our old folks are fully willing to have the younger generations slave for them to keep their smooth ride going, even when the old folks have lots of money and our young folks don't. Our old folks insist on their free rides, no matter how much harm it costs everyone else to get it for them.
We have the most corrupt generation in the history of our country expecting their duly promised handouts and throwing fits if one nickel is withheld from their greedy, grasping hands. Everything after them has to change, because we can no longer afford these magnificent promises that our political elite made to keep their voters happy to keep them in power.
I despise this greed and selfishness by people who care nothing about anyone else but themselves. I am one of those people who would love to throw these old folks off the dole and back to paying their own way. I might not see these old folks kicked off the dole in my lifetime, but at least I know that there will never be another generation as self-serving and corrupt as these thieves in our country for a very, very long time.
Don in Rochester, NY
Thursday, August 30, 2012 at 3:46 PM
That is the insidious nature of the entitlement society... It's very difficult to kick the habit once you've had a "taste".
I actually have more angst towards folks that have never paid into the system insisting on their full participation during the payout phase.
If only the box HAD been locked we would have far less to worry about. The greedy politicos put the "greedy old folks" to shame. November 6th can't come soon enough.
Peter in Las Vegas
Friday, August 31, 2012 at 4:44 PM
"... think, if only for the novelty of it" - how droll.