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Showing Original Post only (View all)"Social security won’t be around long enough for me to collect it" [View all]
by JOHN QUIGGIN
Salon has a couple of interesting articles about millennials. Tim Donovan focuses on the plight of young people without college education who are suffering the combined effects of long-term growth in inequality and the scarring that comes from entering the worst labor market in at least a generation1. Elias Isquith has a piece debunking Rand Pauls prospects of pulling the millennial vote (Ive seen a few of these lately, which may or may not mean anything), which includes the following observation
Despite the fact that a whopping 51 percent of millennials believe theyll receive no Social Security benefits by the time theyre eligible, and despite the fact that 53 percent of millennials think government should focus spending on helping the young rather than the old, a remarkable 61 percent of young voters oppose cutting Social Security benefits in any way, full stop.
The idea that Social security wont be around long enough for me to collect it is a hardy perennial, and thinking about it led me to the following observation:
Its now possible for someone to have spent their entire working life believing that Social Security would not last long enough for them to receive it, and now to have retired and started collecting benefits. This belief has been prevalent at least since the early years of the Reagan Administration when it was pushed hard by David Stockman, and Im going to date it to the first big reform of the system in 1977. Someone born in 1952, who entered the workforce in 1977 at the age of 25, would now be turning 62 and eligible to collect Social Security. Im betting that, in 20 years time, when the 1952 cohort reaches their average life expectancy, having enjoyed their full entitlement to benefits (assuming no grand bargain intervenes) that the belief will be just as prevalent
http://crookedtimber.org/2014/03/23/social-security-wont-be-around-long-enough-for-me-to-collect-it/
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