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In reply to the discussion: Social Security is Wage Insurance, for wage earners, not people who earn from capital [View all]TheKentuckian
(26,314 posts)71. Yeah, I'm leaning mumbo jumbo or at least toward distinction without a difference.
Maximum benefits that cannot be increased mean they are for all practical purposes, capped.
But you know what we can end the cap on contributions, end maximum benefits, have hypothetically uncapped payouts, and grow the pool of resources all by just setting up the right formula.
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Social Security is Wage Insurance, for wage earners, not people who earn from capital [View all]
FogerRox
Nov 2013
OP
Why not? Your argument that a too miserly COLA could be paid for a smaller increase changes nothing.
TheKentuckian
Nov 2013
#11
They won't be 'capped forever' if the COLA increase is done correctly rather than cheating
sabrina 1
Nov 2013
#39
No, the maximum benefit could go up as well or even be eliminated as long as the right
TheKentuckian
Nov 2013
#12
They can be given a return on their additional investment and still benefit the fund too.
TheKentuckian
Nov 2013
#10
Of course there will be considerable resistance, sure indicator of something needing doing.
TheKentuckian
Dec 2013
#44
No it won't. The rich don't pay a general fund tax *instead* of SS. They just aren't taxed for SS
Romulox
Nov 2013
#15
Perhaps a leprechaun should provide a pot of gold? It's just as logically related.
Romulox
Nov 2013
#23
You still don't get it. If we are going to impose a 13% tax increase on upper income,
Hoyt
Nov 2013
#24
Nobody with the power to do so is proposing that. So it's a straw man argument you make, to suggest
Romulox
Dec 2013
#50
Good, they will have paid in significantly. They are entitled to their payout.
TheKentuckian
Dec 2013
#46
Legally - if you cap benefits, thats a means test. A means test turns SS into welfare.
FogerRox
Dec 2013
#64
I don't see how we are going to be on the same page as i don't favor a cap on benefits.
TheKentuckian
Dec 2013
#67
Yeah, I'm leaning mumbo jumbo or at least toward distinction without a difference.
TheKentuckian
Dec 2013
#71
Well first of all, you obviously haven't been Ferrari shopping lately.
Egalitarian Thug
Dec 2013
#47
Yes, the rich shouldn't be asked to contribute a *penny* more. Wouldn't be "fair".
Romulox
Nov 2013
#14
SS isn't solvent as to my generation. It must be made so. Income tax won't do that. nt
Romulox
Nov 2013
#17
No. SS funds should be used to shore up SS's solvency, by definition. There is no mechanism
Romulox
Nov 2013
#36
Please understand, raising the SS income cap automatically raises benefits. See AIME formula.
FogerRox
Nov 2013
#29
If the last 40 years were the model, there would not be an issue with SS Solvency
FogerRox
Nov 2013
#38
Horse hockey. SS taxes on your generation do not have to go up to sustain current benefit levels
FogerRox
Nov 2013
#30
That's not what the Congressional Budget Office says. 2038 is in the lives of *CURRENT WORKERS*.
Romulox
Dec 2013
#49
IS paying an uber rich senior retiree enough SS to buy a new Italian sports car each year... fair?
FogerRox
Dec 2013
#55
Only way, hardly. Create jobs adds more FICA, increase min wage adds more FICA
FogerRox
Dec 2013
#63
Here's your 7th K&R Why do recommendations for this OP keep disappearing?
Jeffersons Ghost
Dec 2013
#74