Aug 15, 2010
Change Coming On Same Sex Marriages?
Aug 14, 2010
Aug 13, 2010
Presidential Proclamation
Astrue On 75th Anniversary
Social Security, the most successful domestic program in our nation’s history, is celebrating its 75th anniversary. ...
Today, millions of retirees live in dignity thanks to their monthly Social Security benefit payment. Over the decades, Social Security expanded to not only protect against the risk of poverty in old age, but also the economic risk of career-ending disability and the premature death of a worker. ...As we celebrate 75 years, I reflect on how Social Security was there for my family, how proud I am to work for this remarkable program, and how lucky I am to lead such a talented and compassionate work force.
I have two wonderful children who entered the work force in the past year. One is being called up for active military duty in October and the other will teach inner-city children. It is imperative that they and millions of other young Americans have confidence that we will continue to honor the great inter-generational contract that is Social Security.
It is in this spirit that President Barack Obama established the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform that in December will make recommendations regarding the future of Social Security. ...
Aug 12, 2010
Social Security Reduces Poverty
Social Security benefits play a vital role in reducing poverty. Without Social Security, according to the latest available Census data (for 2008), 19.8 million more Americans would be poor. Although most of those kept out of poverty by Social Security are elderly, nearly a third are under age 65, including 1.1 million children. ...
TABLE 1: Effect of Social Security on Poverty, 2008 | |||
Age Group | Percent in Poverty | Number Lifted Out of Poverty by Social Security | |
Excluding Social Security | Including Social Security | ||
Children Under 18 | 20.5 | 19.0 | 1,117,000 |
Adults Aged 18-64 | 14.5 | 11.7 | 5,281,000 |
Elderly Aged 65 and Over | 45.2 | 9.7 | 13,410,000 |
Total, All Ages | 19.8 | 13.2 | 19,808,000 |
Memorandum: | |||
Women Aged 65 and Over | 49.7 | 11.9 | 8,120,000 |
Source: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, March 2009. |
Brace Yourself: OMB Clears Mental Listings
OMB had approved a set of amendments to the mental impairment listings in the waning days of the George W. Bush Administration but Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue declined to publish that set. We have no way of knowing how that set of amendments differed from the set just approved by OMB. We have no way of knowing what changes were made in the proposal while it was pending at OMB this time. In fact, we have no way of knowing what is in this set until it is published in the Federal Register.
Amendments to the mental impairment listings are potentially quite controversial. These listings have a greater effect than any other listings. Mental illness is among the most important causes for disability. Mental illness remains a controversial topic with the public, many of whom regard it as largely imaginary. Over the decades that I have been involved with Social Security, I have seen the agency take somewhat extreme positions on the evaluation of mental disability.
I should know better than to make predictions but I will do so anyway. I predict that Social Security will make it dramatically more difficult to be found disabled as a result of mental retardation. I have never understood why, but this group has been at the top of Social Security's hit list for about a decade. I also predict that Social Security will make it more difficult for adults to be found disabled as a result of bipolar disorder and dramatically more difficult for children to be found disabled as a result of bipolar disorder. Maybe, they will propose to make it less difficult for schizophrenics to be found disabled. They ought to. They may try to slip in something to alter the standards for determining disability for those who have both a substance abuse disorder and another mental disorder. Anything along that line would be extraordinarily controversial and might not withstand judicial review. One safe prediction is that the preamble to the proposed mental impairment listings will be very, very long.
Expect that these proposed changes will appear in the Federal Register soon, perhaps next week. The public will have an opportunity to comment. Social Security must consider these comments and again obtain OMB approval before this proposal can be made official.
A Badge Of Seriousness
A lot of the Beltway establishment has a thing about Social Security — in a way, by the way, they don’t have a thing about Medicare, which is a vastly more important long-run problem. No matter how much you talk logic or numbers, they’re obsessed with the idea that Social Security must be cut; as I wrote back when, somewhere back in the 90s talking tough on Social Security became a badge of seriousness, and facts just can’t make a dent in that social convention.