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This article discusses the importance of social insurance, with a focus on Social Security, in providing adequate policy for workers. It explores the advantages of a universal system, the role of the government as the insurer of last resort, and the limitations of private insurance. The article also highlights the risks that social insurance can protect against and distinguishes social insurance programs from public assistance programs.
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Social Security Innovations Challenge: Ensuring Adequate Policy for Workers Social Security and Social Insurance Monique Morrissey Economic Policy Institute March 5, 2019 National Academy of Social Insurance & AARP
What is the function of social insurance? • Insurance? • Poverty alleviation? • Income redistribution? • Macroeconomic stabilization?
Answer: E. All of the above! (but always includes insurance component) • Social insurance can be useful even in absence of poverty, inequality, economic instability • Social Security is the quintessential social insurance program: • Insures workers, families against death, disability, and outliving savings • Single most important anti-poverty program—not just for seniors • Replaces a higher share of pre-retirement income for low earners • Automatic stabilizer • Enables older workers who lose jobs during recessions to retire; countercyclical effect boosts consumption & lowers unemployment (401ks have opposite effect).
Advantages of a universal system • Maximizes risk pooling • No adverse selection • Economies of scale • Costs spread over lifecycle • Intergenerational social compact
Social insurance often intergenerational • Social Security essentially a pay-as-you-go system. • Current workers fund current beneficiaries • First beneficiaries contributed little • Seniors devastated by Great Depression • Trust fund usually small—built up to fund Boomer retirement. • Internal rate of return ≈ economic growth rate • Similar to long-run financial ROR with less volatility
Government as insurer of last resort • Family members can die • Insurance companies can go bankrupt • Government endures
Private insurance often inefficient, insecure, inadequate • Needs to be regulated • Incentive to deny claims, cherry-pick participants • Investors protected from downside risk • Often—not always—more expensive • Adverse selection • Profit margins • Comparison shopping difficult; trust & complexity issues • Marketing, billing, underwriting costs • But, in some cases, private-sector may do a better job restraining costs • Examples: Medicare Advantage plans game the system & take advantage of taxpayer subsidies. Individual annuities, disability & long-term care insurance are expensive, rarely bought.
What risks can social insurance protect against? • Lost earnings due to… • Work injury or illness • Unemployment • Disability • Old age • Death (survivor benefits) • Medical, long-term care& other catastrophic expenses • Loss of pension benefits due to employer bankruptcy
Social Insurance ≠ Public Assistance An ideal social insurance program is… • Universal • Contributory • Defined by statute • Not means-tested Few programs perfectly fit this mold.
Is Medicare (1965) social insurance? Yes, even though Medicare… • is partly voluntary (except Part A) • is partly funded out of general revenues • is partly privatized (Part C) • doesn’t protect against catastrophic expenses
Social insurance is enduring • Intergenerational social contract • Dedicated funding • Earned benefits • Allows future planning (retirement benefits)
Popular among voters of all political stripes • Failed Social Security privatization designed to grow GOP investor base. • Most effective attacks focused on sustainability • Young people still supportive, but worried. • Some conservatives call for a more “progressive” program, but progressives resist.
Means-tested programs • Stigmatized • Complex • Costly to administer • Applicants deterred by need for documentation, time-consuming process. “Programs for the poor become poor programs”
Social Insurance Programs • Social Security • Workers’ Compensation • Unemployment Insurance • Medicare • Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation
Public Assistance Programs(a.k.a. safety net, means-tested, welfare) • Income: SSI, EITC • Health: Medicaid, CHIP • Food: SNAP, WIC, School Lunch/Breakfast • Energy: LIHEAP
Should long-term care be a means-tested benefit? • Medicaid does a reasonable job covering working-age families • ACA expansion. • Helps low-income (“dual eligible”) seniors afford medical expenses. • Pays for long-term care, but only after drawdown
Social Security ≠ SSI • Both provide income to seniors and disabled, among other beneficiaries • Both administered by Social Security Administration • One is social insurance, the other is a safety-net program
Social Security (1935) • Almost all workers are covered • Mostly financed by employer and employee contributions • Benefits based on career earnings • No income, resource limits • Minimum work credits required • Provides benefits to eligible family members • Other income generally doesn’t affect benefits, though… • earnings may affect disability & early retirement benefits • some higher-income retirees pay taxes on benefits • Where you live, who you live with doesn’t affect benefit
SSI (1972) • Benefits based on need • Financed by general revenues • Beneficiaries must have limited income, resources • No work credits required • No family benefits • Benefit based on federal and state laws • Other income may affect benefits • Where you live, who lives with you may affect benefits Source: SSA, Social Security and SSI: What’s the difference?” 2009
Precursors Local/State • Poor relief • Mothers’ pensions • Teacher, firefighter, police pensions • Aid to the blind • State workers’ compensation laws Federal • Veterans benefits • Widows benefits, land grants • Civil service retirement Federal role expanded in Great Depression. Some programs, like workers compensation, governed by both federal and state laws.
FDR’s Expansive Vision • Envisioned broad social insurance, not just retirement • German model (Bismarck) • Contributory program that protected workers and their families • In contrast, Canada & other countries have an old-age tier for all seniors (not means-tested like SSI) • Health, unemployment, disability & other benefits planned • Health insurance took longest—pushback from medical profession
Why don’t people just save? • Precautionary saving can’t cover catastrophic expenses • Retirement seems more predictable, since most workers will retire • However, longevity and investment risks remain • Need to contribute twice as much to a 401(k) to provide similar retirement security.
Is social insurance always the answer? • Can encourage risky behavior (“moral hazard”) • e.g. disaster assistance, flood insurance • Can be costly to administer,guard against fraud • Should have social (not just private) benefit • Can discourage work • Netherlands disability insurance
Alternatives • Mandatory private insurance • Car owners’ liability insurance • Affordable Care Act insurance mandate • Taxpayer-subsidized saving • 401(k)s, HSAs, etc. • Saving may be voluntary,but taxes aren’t! • Safety net programs
Expansion and Retrenchment 1935: Signed into law 1937: First taxes collected (1%+1% to $3,000) 1939: Benefits for survivors and dependents 1956: Early retirement benefits for women (62) 1956: Disability benefits for workers aged 50-64 1961: Early retirement benefits for men (62) 1965: Payments to divorced wives 1972: Automatic COLA 1977: Payments to divorced husbands 1983: Gradual increase in retirement age to 67 Taxation of benefits (gradually hits middle-class) 2000: Elimination of earnings test above NRA