Presidential Debate 1 Excerpt: Social Security
These comments are slightly edited for clarity. For the unedited transcript of these comments see the Social Security transcript on this site, or the complete debate transcript from CSpan.
MR. LEHRER: Both of you have Social Security reform plans. Many experts, including Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan, Vice President Gore, say that it will be impossible for either of you, essentially, to keep the system viable on its own during the coming baby-boomer-retirement onslaught without either reducing benefits or increasing taxes. Do you disagree?
The governor wants to ... drain a trillion dollars out of the Social Security Trust Fund ... Social Security would go bankrupt within this generation. |
Vice President Gore
I will keep Social Security in a lock box, and that pays down the national debt, and the interest savings I would put right back into Social Security. That extends the life of Social Security for 55 years. Now, I think that it's very important to understand that cutting benefits under Social Security means that people like Winifred Skinner (sp) from Des Moines, Iowa, who is here, would really have a much harder time because there are millions of seniors who are living almost hand-to-mouth, and you talk about cutting benefits -- I don't go along with it. I am opposed to it.
I'm also opposed to a plan that diverts one out of every six dollars away from the Social Security Trust Fund. You know, Social Security is a trust fund that pays the checks this year with the money that's paid into Social Security this year. The governor wants to divert one out of every six dollars off into the stock market, which means that he would drain a trillion dollars out of the Social Security trust fund over the -- in this generation, over the next ten years, and Social Security under that approach would go bankrupt within this generation.
His leading adviser on this plan actually said that would be okay because then the Social Security trust fund could start borrowing; it would borrow up to $3 trillion. Now, Social Security has never done that, and I don't think it should do that. I think it should stay in a lock box. And I'll tell you this: I will veto anything that takes money out of Social Security for privatization or anything else other than Social Security.
The payroll taxes are your money; you ought to put it in prudent, safe investments |
Governor Bush
The revenues exceed the expenses in Social Security to the year 2015, which means all retirees are going to get the promises made. So for those of you who he wants to scare into the voting booth to vote for him, hear me loud and clear: A promise made will be a promise kept. And you bet we want to allow younger workers to take some of their own money -- see, that's a difference of opinion; the vice president thinks it's the government's money. The payroll taxes are your money; you ought to put it in prudent, safe investments so that $1 trillion over the next 10 years grows to be $3 trillion. The money stays within the Social Security system. It's a part of the -- it's a part of the Social Security system. He keeps claiming it's going to be out of Social Security. It's your money. It's a part of your retirement benefits. It's a fundamental difference between what we believe.
I want you to have your own asset that you can call your own. I want you to have an asset that you can pass on from one generation to the next. I want to get a better rate of return for your own money than the paltry 2 percent that the current Social Security trust gets today.
So Mr. Greenspan missed the -- I thought missed an opportunity to say there's a third way, and that is to get a better rate of return on the Social Security monies coming into the trust. There's $2.3 trillion of surplus that we can use to make sure younger workers have a Social Security plan in the future, if we're smart, if we trust workers, and if we understand the power of the compounding rate of interest.
I give a new incentive for younger workers to save their own money ... but not at the expense of Social Security |
Vice President Gore
If you cut the amount going in one out of every six dollars, then you have to cut the value of each check by one out of every six dollars, unless you come up with the money from somewhere else. I would like to know from the governor -- I know we're not supposed to ask each other questions, but I'd be interested in knowing -- does that trillion dollars come from the trust fund, or does it come from the rest of the budget?
There's enough money to pay seniors today in the current affairs of Social Security. The trillion comes from the surplus. |
Governor Bush
It's time to have a leader that doesn't put off -- you know, tomorrow what we should do today. It's time to have somebody to step up and say, Look, let's let younger workers take some of their own money and, under certain guidelines, invest it in the private markets. The safest of federal investments yields a 4 percent. That's twice the amount of rate of return in the current Social Security trust. There's a fundamental difference of opinion here, folks.
Younger worker after younger worker hears my call that says, "I trust you." And you know what? The issue is changing, because seniors now understand that the promise made will be a promise kept. But younger workers now understand we better have a government that trusts them, and that's exactly what I'm going to do.
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