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There
has been a lot of talk in Washington recently about senior citizens, mostly
about how various healthcare reform models would help or hurt them. But there
is another critical issue that has quietly devastated seniors financially
over the last few decades. It concerns how the cost of living is calculated.
How does the administration justify not giving a cost of living increase to
Social Security recipients this year? According to the official Consumer
Price Index calculation, life has gotten cheaper for the first time in
decades. If the government can show statistically that the cost of living has
gone down, not up, then they can make the case for not giving a cost of
living increase to social security recipients. But does this match reality?
Using older calculations of CPI, the cost of living has actually increased -
by roughly 5%.
The
CPI (Consumer Price Index) is a calculation based on the average price of a
fixed basket of goods that was initially designed to help businesses adjust
for inflation. The government eventually started using it to determine cost
of living adjustments for entitlement programs. Couple that with politicians'
discovery that they could raid the social security trust fund to pay for new
spending programs, and you have a perfect storm to deny seniors what they
were promised, while hiding the true size of the deficit. For politicians, it
is a win-win.
For
seniors, it is a different story. Economist John Williams of Shadow
Government Statistics has estimated that if the original methodology of CPI
had not changed, Social Security checks would be nearly double what they are
today. This represents a lot of money that politicians have been able to
literally steal from seniors, to spend on their own wasteful programs. One
example of how they do this is to substitute hamburger for steak, which
lowers the average price of that basket of goods. But living on hamburger, or
maybe dog food, instead of steak does not represent a constant standard of
living. This renders the measurement virtually meaningless, even though
politically it comes in very handy.
I
have introduced legislation to keep politicians in Washington from ever
raiding the Social Security trust fund again. HR 219 The Social Security
Preservation Act would assure that all monies collected by the Social
Security Trust Fund would only be used in payments to beneficiaries, or be
placed in interest bearing certificates of deposit. This would at least stop
the bleeding of the fund, and take away some incentive to tease and torture
the numbers in order to give seniors the minimal amount. This would also cut
off a source of funding for government growth, so it is not likely to get
easy support from many politicians.
It is
bad enough that Washington imposes high payroll taxes on American workers.
The least Congress could do is use the tax dollars for their stated purpose.
Instead, seniors will have a harder and harder time trying to survive on a
fixed income in an economy based on variables and deception. For them, it is
too late to start over. Today's young people will be forced to pay into the
system for years to come. The first step towards solving the impending crisis
facing Social Security is to stop politicians from raiding the trust fund and
to significantly cut federal government spending.
Ron
Paul
www.house.gov/paul
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Congressman
Ron Paul of Texas enjoys a national reputation as the premier advocate for
liberty in politics today. Dr. Paul is the leading spokesman in Washington
for limited constitutional government, low taxes, free markets, and a return
to sound monetary policies based on commodity-backed currency. For more
information click on the Project Freedom website.
Published
with the authorization of Dr. Paul.
Copyright
Dr. Ron Paul
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