Planning to Retire

Does Anyone Still Want Private Social Security Accounts?

By Emily Brandon

Posted: November 5, 2008

Many retirees who have reduced spending power because of depleted 401(k) accounts are thankful that President Bush's plan to partially privatize Social Security was never realized. But the debate over personal Social Security accounts rages on.

The success of private retirement accounts is dependent on the amount a worker contributes, the investment strategy, and the unpredictable whim of the market. Workers who contribute more and get better returns will have more retirement income than those who tuck away less and achieve smaller gains. Social Security benefits, on the other hand, depend on lifetime wages and the age at which benefits are claimed. Workers who retire at the same age with the same earning record generally receive similar benefit amounts regardless of the year in which they claim benefits and the ups and downs in the financial markets.

Two economists recently published papers reaching opposite conclusions about private Social Security accounts. Gary Burtless, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, argues that only a few investors could obtain significantly higher returns if the system were partly or fully privatized. According to his calculations:

"Individual retirement accounts invested solely in the stock market offer a very shaky cornerstone for retirement income. Workers fortunate enough to retire when stock prices are high obtain big pensions, while workers with the bad luck to retire after markets plunge can be left with little money to live on in retirement...Social Security pensions have been far more predictable and have varied within a much narrower range. For that reason, traditional Social Security provides a more predictable basis for retirement planning and a much more reliable foundation for basic retirement income."

Andrew Biggs, a resident scholar at American Enterprise Institute, however, calculates in his paper that personal investment accounts would still have done well, even given the market's recent losses.

"Even workers retiring today would have increased their Social Security benefits by choosing a personal account. Despite the ups and downs of the stock market, every single group of retirees would have increased their benefits by investing in personal accounts. Total benefits would have increased by between 6 and 23 percent, with an average increase of 15 percent. The point here is not that stock investments are a free lunch. In an efficient market, the higher returns paid to stocks are nothing more than compensation for their higher risk, and we do not know that future market returns will be as good as those in the past. But accounts do provide a valuable tool to pre-fund future retirement benefits and reduce cost burdens on tomorrow's workers."

Both researchers assumed that workers contributed 4 percent of wages to the private accounts and that the account balance would be converted to a monthly annuity benefit at retirement, and both used historical stock and bond return data from the past century to reach their seemingly conflicting conclusions.

A major difference between the two papers was the investment strategies tested. Biggs made his calculations assuming investors would chose a life-cycle portfolio that would shift from holding 85 percent stocks through age 29 to only 15 percent stocks by age 55. Burtless calculated how much income private accounts would replace using three different conditions: a 100 percent stock investment strategy (which produced the highest returns), a portfolio composed of 50 percent stocks and 50 percent bonds, and a conservative 100 percent government-bond strategy.

Tell us, would you like a private Social Security account, or do you prefer guaranteed Social Security benefits?

Private Social Security Accounts

If I had been able to invest towards my own retirement for all of these years (I'm 62), I would have a substantial amount of assets that the government could not touch even after the recent mostly government caused economic fiasco.

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Compare that to the so-called Social Security Trust Fund that contains only politician's promises as assets. Those promises are that future taxpayers will be willing and able to pay much higher taxes to fund our retirement while those taxpayers are trying to raise and education their own families while we have double-digit inflation or worse because of the grossly expanded money supply.

cbrtxus of TX @ May 26, 2009 18:09:24 PM

social security

I would still much rather have some control from earlier age... considering that if you had invested when younger and made 10x what social security will pay out well losing half you STILL come out ahead.

We lost lots in our retirement account. BUT on the other hand there are no guarantees that sociall security will even have money in the next 20 years.

That may sound dumb... But if more poeple had more control over a portion of the account then things MIGHT look alot different in a good way. I write for ehow.com and have done a couple of artilces on social security.

Alrady of AZ @ Mar 16, 2009 11:55:36 AM

Privatized vs. Guaranteed SS Benefits

I have mixed emotions about the battle between these two. I am an average citizen with an undergrad in Bus. Management - so I have a pretty good grip on how markets work, etc. - but I still would struggle to trust my retirement success on my own interpretation of the market. Can the government really trust the average american to the average broker (or to themselves for that matter) to smartly invest thier income towards retirement??

If something dramatic happens (again) - will privatizing SS benefits further disconnect the Gov. from responsibility? If we do this, would the gov. fully remove the taxes involved? Would they pay for americans to get seriously educated about the market and how to invest on an elementary level???

Jason Kinney of VA @ Feb 08, 2009 17:11:16 PM

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Planning to Retire

Planning to Retire

Reporter Emily Brandon tells you how to get ready financially for retirement and to make your golden years the best they can be.

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