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1201, 2012

Medicare & Social Security Number Crunching Just Isn’t Enough

By |January 12th, 2012|Aging Issues, Max Richtman, Medicare, Social Security|

We couldn?t help but scratch our heads a bit at all the attention generated by the latest CBO report on raising the eligibility age for Medicare and retirement age for Social Security. You really don?t have to be an economist to know that cutting benefits to millions of Americans saves the government money.Of course, it also shifts costs to seniors and employers, forces millions more into Medicaid or into private insurance exchanges (which will go away if conservatives have their way and repeal healthcare reform) and cuts benefits for those who can?t stay on the job until they’re 70 years old. However, those real-life consequences are never fully discussed by Washington?s fiscal hawks. Never.So?OK?let?s play Washington?s numbers-only game. Even then, as David Dayen at Firedog Lake reminds us, targeting generations of working Americans with benefit cuts isn?t the only way to save money:Yesterday, the Congressional Budget Officeestimated that raising the Medicare eligibility age from 65 to 67 would save the government $148 billion from 2012 to 2021. For context, letting the Bush tax cuts expire would save $3.6trillionover the same ten-year window. So anyone who tells you that we must increase the Medicare age to ?save the budget? should be shown those two numbers. Even just letting the tax cuts over $250,000 expire would save $800 billion, over five times as much. The other difference would be that letting the Bush tax cuts expire would mildly inconvenience wealthy people who can afford the hit, while raising the Medicare age would put a massive burden on 65 and 66 year-olds, increase health insurance premiums for everyone by changing the risk pools, and probably increase overall health costs across the system.Dean Baker at the Center for Economic and Policy Research says:?The cost of this savings is a much higher health care bill for beneficiaries. As it is now, millions of people in their 60s struggle to hang onto jobs that provide health care insurance or do without, hoping that they can make it until 65 without a major medical problem. This proposal pushes the magic age out two more years.And there should be no mistake; the cost of insurance for someone in his/her mid-60s is a real burden. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected that the cost (in 2011 dollars) of insuring someone in the private sector at age 65 will be $15,500 a year in 2022. ?the proposal to raise the age of Medicare eligibility to 67 is a proposal to increase health care costs to our children and grandchildren by $2.7 trillion. The idea that this cut is being presented as somehow helping our children is a sick joke that would only be taken seriously in Washington political circles.On the Social Security side CBO claims GDP will increase 1% if Americans can?t retire until age 70 because they?ll have to remain on the job longer. But we?re wondering?what jobs? We certainly don?t know of any national effort to encourage companies to hire (or even retain) 67 year olds?do you? And what will that mean for our children and grandchildren struggling to enter an already depressing job market hoping to build their careers?These are the questions Washington should really be asking. Let’s see a CBO report with more detail on these issues.


901, 2012

The Race to See Who Can Slash Social Security & Medicare Most

By |January 9th, 2012|Budget, entitlement reform, Medicare, Presidential Politics, Social Security|

For those of you who’ve been watching the GOP debates, no doubt you’ve heard the same consistent theme we have –America’s middle class and poor must continue to pay the price for failed economic policies of the past. Once again, “shared sacrifice” really just means more of the same. Cut middle-class benefits to pay for tax breaks for the wealthy. The “real pain” and “get tough” strategies these candidates proposal target Americans who are already suffering in this economic nightmare, once again leaving those who’ve benefited the most untouched:The Huffington Post has a nice summary:

Rick Santorum Gets Tough On Food Stamps, Jon Huntsman Promises ‘Real Pain’

Moderator David Gregory pivoted to “substance” about 10 minutes after Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) suggested he should in Sunday’s NBC/Facebook presidential debate. Gregory asked former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman to suggest three areas in which Americans would feel “real pain” under his budget cutting regime.Huntsman responded: “I agree with the Ryan plan. I think I’m the only one on the stage who’s embraced the Ryan plan.”Most of his fellow candidates have danced around in their support for the plan because it’s seen as something akin to electoral poison. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) himself is now backing a plan he cooked up with Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.).Of course, while the original Ryan plan would definitively inflict pain (it would solve the problem of Medicare spending by providing Medicare recipients with a voucher designed to grow less valuable over time), Gregory wasn’t satisfied with Huntsman’s answer and pressed for “three areas.” Huntsman, after prompting, offered Social Security, Medicare and defense.Former Sen. Rick Santorum agreed with Huntsman on Social Security means testing, but went further, offering a plan to turn food stamps and housing assistance into block grants for states, in which recipients would be required to work and time limits would be imposed. This allowed Santorum to remind everyone of his role in the welfare reform fights of the 1990s.Santorum wants to do to food stamps, housing assistance and Medicaid what he did for welfare back then. The program was eliminated in 1996 by a Republican Congress and a Democratic president, and replaced with a time-limited program that cuts people off regardless of their family’s financial situation.It failed: Poverty has risen significantly since the program was eliminated and replaced. (It succeeded, however, if the goal was simply to take the issues of welfare and poverty off the political table.)Today, more than 46 million people live in poverty, the highest since the Bureau of Labor Statistics began counting more than half a century ago.That model, said Santorum, should be applied to other assistance programs, cutting families off without regard to their current situation but instead based on timelines set by Congress.”We’ve gotta block-grant [food stamps] and send it back to the states, just like I did with welfare reform — do the same thing with Medicaid, including housing programs, block-grant them, send them back to the states, require work, and you put a time limit on it,” said Santorum.”We’ll help take these programs, which are now dependencies,” he said, “and you help people move out of poverty.”But without a dramatic and unprecedented expansion of jobs that pay middle-class wages, it’s unclear where those tens of millions of people would find such work.


301, 2012

Aging in America

By |January 3rd, 2012|Aging Issues, baby boomers, entitlement reform, healthcare, Medicare, Social Security|

James Ridgeway at Unsilent Generation provides some desperately needed perspective on the reality of aging in America. Contrary to Washington’s popular “greedy geezer” mythology, our nation’s older Americans are not living high on the hog and are in fact facing an extremely uncertain future as Congress continues to find ways to balance our federal books with cuts to programs servingmiddle-class Americans.Make this among the first articles you share with friends and loved ones this New Year!

The Future of Old Age in America

Unsilent Generation, Commentary, James Ridgeway, Posted: Jan 03, 2012 WASHINGTON, D.C.–In her remarkable book The Coming of Age, Simone de Beauvoir observed that fear of aging and death drives younger people to view their elders as a separate species, rather than as their own future selves: ?Until the moment it is upon us,? she wrote, ?old age is something that only affects other people. So it is understandable that society should prevent us from seeing our own kind, our fellow men, when we look at the old.?This disconnect has, no doubt, been helpful to those who favor cutting the so-called old age entitlements, Social Security and Medicare — which, these days, seems to include just about everyone in Washington. Now that the congressional supercommittee, charged with reducing the federal deficit, has gone down in flames, some are calling for a return to the plan proposed by the chairmen who headed Obama?s Simpson-Bowles deficit commission last year. Like the supercommittee, the commission itself couldn’t agree on a plan for Congress to vote on.Debunked Myths IgnoredAmidst all the bipartisan warring, one thing most of these committee members agree on is that the budget will, in large part, be balanced on the backs of old people, through cuts to Social Security and Medicare. The only differences are over how these cuts should be made, and how large they should be.In the unlikely event that the rich are made to pay something toward deficit reduction, in the form of increased taxes, their contribution will pale in comparison to the share paid by elders in the form of reduced benefits. In part, that?s because the enemies of entitlements have succeeded in depicting these lifesaving government programs as the cause of our economic woes — a myth that has repeatedly been debunked to little avail.By extension, they depict our current fiscal crisis as a standoff between the old and the young, rather than the rich and the poor. Former Senator Alan Simpson, the Republican handpicked by Obama to co-chair his bipartisan 2010 deficit commission, was fond of talking about the perfidy of ?fat cat geezers,” who dared to oppose entitlement cuts at the expense of his — and everyone?s — grandchildren.Simpson?s image of old people — ?who live in gated communities and drive their Lexus to the Perkins restaurant to get the AARP discount? — seems to have gained traction as the dominant view of elders in this country. This belies the reality of the lives lived by millions of older Americans, for whom a comfortable retirement was never more than a distant dream. For them, old age means work or poverty ? or, sometimes, both.A More Rounded ViewRecently, I attended the annual meeting in Boston of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA), a research and education organization whose members study all aspects of aging. With 3,500 people in attendance, hundreds of sessions and a teeming exhibit hall, there was plenty of upbeat talk about the ?encore years.?But there was also a body of research and discussion that presented a more rounded picture of old age in America — a place where ?fat cat geezers? are far outnumbered by elders who, like Americans of all ages, are struggling to get by.In one exhibit on ?The Economics of Aging,? researchers from Wayne State University presented a study published earlier this year called ?Invisible Poverty,? which found that one in three elders ? including many living in middle-class suburbs ? cannot fully cover their basic living expenses, including food, housing, transportation and medical care. It also found that certain shortcomings in the way federal poverty statistics are compiled meant that poverty among older people was more likely to be underestimated.?This widespread economic struggle faced by Michigan seniors is fairly hidden from public sight, making it an invisible poverty that takes its toll on older individuals, their families and caregivers and the community at large,? says the study.Among the elderly poor are large and growing numbers of women. Consider the figures: over 40% of black and white women over 65 live alone, and over a quarter of these women are poor. They are likely to be isolated and they, too, are invisible.2 Million LGBT Elders Below Policy RadarAlso below the public policy radar, according to another study presented at the conference, are lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender elders — who are now counted at over 2 million and are expected to double in number by 2030. These people are far less likely to have partners or caregivers of any sort, because society banned or discouraged them.For these elders, and millions of others, Social Security is more than an ?entitlement? — it is a lifeline.According to a recent report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Social Security alone keeps 20 million Americans above the poverty line. It?s hard to argue that Social Security benefits are too generous, or that retirees enjoy extravagant lifestyles.The average Social Security benefit for 2012 stands at just over $1,200 a month. As the Center for Economic and Policy Research?s Dean Baker notes, ?More than 75 percent of benefits go to individuals with non-Social Security income of less than $20,000 a year and more than 90 percent of benefits go to individuals with non-Social Security income of less than $40,000 a year.?In addition, Baker points out:?The private pension system has largely collapsed and the current group of near retirees saw much of their home equity disappear with the collapse of the housing bubble. As a result, the situation of retirees is likely to be worse in the near future, especially after taking into account the growing burden of out-of-pocket healthcare expenses projected in the decades ahead.?So it is the search for work, not cleaning one?s fingernails or studying French to stave off dementia, that is now a major concern for many older people. Historically they have been fired from long-held jobs because of their costly benefits and diminishing ability to handle the job, but now employers are taking a fresh look at this situation.Business, as it turns out, may very well embrace the old — because they often come at lower wages, with no benefits and scant legal protection. Given U.S. Supreme Court rulings, the prospect of any of these people filing old age discrimination suits is unlikely. Rather than knocking them out of a job, it may turn out to be less expensive to keep on a skilled, elderly employee, perhaps at reduced salary and reduced hours, than go through the rigamarole of hiring a young, inexperienced person, who must then undergo training.A Different Society EmergingAs the GSA conference showed, there is no point in cutting entitlements to elders when, in fact, so little is known about their lives and their emerging future. It means there must be a full, open debate — not backdoor political maneuvering — on the issue.What may be happening here is the emerging outlines of a much different society than the one we now know: a society that, for example, will require a new service sector, a different slant towards medicine, which uses the old to assist the young, as friends and caregivers — instead of pitting generations against one another.The late Theodore Roszak, who described and named the ?counter culture? that took shape in the 1970s, thought old people were anything but a selfish bunch of useless geezers waiting to die. He called them an ?audacious generation,? opening a new world of energy and hope. Let us hope, in de Beauvoir?s words, that moment is upon us.James Ridgeway wrote this article as part of a MetLife Foundation Journalists in Aging Fellowship, a program of the Gerontological Society of America and New America Media. The article first appeared in The Guardian.


2112, 2011

Payroll Tax “Holiday” Deadlock

By |December 21st, 2011|Budget, Max Richtman, Medicare, Social Security, stimulus|

Washington Should Pursue New Middle-Class Stimulus Plan in the New Year

So, it’s been another wild week in Washington as passage of a stimulus plan that once seemed a foregone conclusion faced unexpected defeat in the House.You don’t have to look far to see the hundreds of millions of reasons why this nation needs a stimulus package.For the unemployed now scheduled to lose their unemployment insurance benefits to America’s seniors on Medicare this legislation also included critical provisions necessary for their survival.However, this failure in Washington could havea happy ending. We say, let’s use this opportunity to craft a new stimulus approach–one that doesn’t use general revenue to replace diverted Social Security payroll contributions. Here’s reaction from our President/CEO, Max Richtman:

?Providing a middle class tax cut to help spur the economy is the right policy but cutting the contributions that fund Social Security is the wrong strategy. The House?s refusal to pass the Senate?s compromise stimulus plan now provides Washington an opportunity to craft a stimulus package that benefits average Americans without diverting funds from Social Security. We urge the White House and Congress to welcome the New Year with a new initiative promoting the most effective economic stimulus plan possible regardless of the partisan politics involved. There are more effective forms of stimulus which Congress should pass, such as the ?Making Work Pay? tax credit. Now?s the time to reframe the stimulus debate. Allowing millions of unemployed Americans, low-income seniors on Medicare, and Medicare doctors to face massive cuts or loss of benefits through Congressional inaction is simply unacceptable. Congress should act this year to pass these measures which have bipartisan support. Rather than beginning the New Year rehashing an old debate, we urge Washington?s leaders to throw out the political playbook and fight for the strongest possible stimulus package for America?s middle-class that doesn?t divert funds from Social Security.?? Max Richtman, NCPSSM President/CEO


1512, 2011

Repackaged Medicare Voucher Plan is More Bad News for Seniors

By |December 15th, 2011|Budget, healthcare, Max Richtman, Medicare, privatization|

New political wrapping can?t hide privatization scheme in Wyden/RyanSenator Wyden and Congressman Ryan?s newly proposed voucher plan offers a slight twist on the same failed approach to Medicare reform that was originally offered by the Ryan legislation and rejected by the majority of Americans ? coupon care for seniors. The Ryan/Wyden voucher plan would shift a growing share of Medicare costs to beneficiaries without reducing overall costs in the program while undermining traditional Medicare.

  • Beneficiaries would be forced to pay more for Medicare benefits because premiums would be indexed to the gross domestic product, plus 1 percent, which historically has risen far more slowly than health care costs.
  • The Ryan-Wyden plan could actually increase Medicare costs because it expands private Medicare plans that cost an average of 10 percent more than what the same coverage would cost in traditional Medicare.
  • If younger retirees enter the new program and the oldest and sickest remain in traditional Medicare, the program will be faced with a pool of increasingly costly beneficiaries. Medicare spending would go up and seniors who remain in traditional Medicare would see their costs go up as well.

?While some in Washington remain convinced private insurers can provide more cost-effective coverage for seniors than Medicare, the facts prove otherwise. Private Medicare Advantage plans have already shown this to be a false promise. What this Ryan/Wyden plan would do is drive younger and healthier seniors out of traditional Medicare, leaving the government with a pool of increasingly costly beneficiaries. Medicare spending will increase and seniors who remain in traditional Medicare will see their costs go up as well.The only winner in this privatization plan would be private insurers who would be given the ability to cherry-pick the nation?s healthiest seniors from the traditional Medicare program, allowing it to whither on the vine. America?s seniors understand how vital Medicare is to the health of our nation and want to find ways to strengthen the program for future generations. But this proposal increases costs for everyone while ignoring the core issue of rising health care costs. That?s not reform?that?s the end of Medicare as we know it.? Max Richtman, NCPSSM President/CEO


Medicare & Social Security Number Crunching Just Isn’t Enough

By |January 12th, 2012|Aging Issues, Max Richtman, Medicare, Social Security|

We couldn?t help but scratch our heads a bit at all the attention generated by the latest CBO report on raising the eligibility age for Medicare and retirement age for Social Security. You really don?t have to be an economist to know that cutting benefits to millions of Americans saves the government money.Of course, it also shifts costs to seniors and employers, forces millions more into Medicaid or into private insurance exchanges (which will go away if conservatives have their way and repeal healthcare reform) and cuts benefits for those who can?t stay on the job until they’re 70 years old. However, those real-life consequences are never fully discussed by Washington?s fiscal hawks. Never.So?OK?let?s play Washington?s numbers-only game. Even then, as David Dayen at Firedog Lake reminds us, targeting generations of working Americans with benefit cuts isn?t the only way to save money:Yesterday, the Congressional Budget Officeestimated that raising the Medicare eligibility age from 65 to 67 would save the government $148 billion from 2012 to 2021. For context, letting the Bush tax cuts expire would save $3.6trillionover the same ten-year window. So anyone who tells you that we must increase the Medicare age to ?save the budget? should be shown those two numbers. Even just letting the tax cuts over $250,000 expire would save $800 billion, over five times as much. The other difference would be that letting the Bush tax cuts expire would mildly inconvenience wealthy people who can afford the hit, while raising the Medicare age would put a massive burden on 65 and 66 year-olds, increase health insurance premiums for everyone by changing the risk pools, and probably increase overall health costs across the system.Dean Baker at the Center for Economic and Policy Research says:?The cost of this savings is a much higher health care bill for beneficiaries. As it is now, millions of people in their 60s struggle to hang onto jobs that provide health care insurance or do without, hoping that they can make it until 65 without a major medical problem. This proposal pushes the magic age out two more years.And there should be no mistake; the cost of insurance for someone in his/her mid-60s is a real burden. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected that the cost (in 2011 dollars) of insuring someone in the private sector at age 65 will be $15,500 a year in 2022. ?the proposal to raise the age of Medicare eligibility to 67 is a proposal to increase health care costs to our children and grandchildren by $2.7 trillion. The idea that this cut is being presented as somehow helping our children is a sick joke that would only be taken seriously in Washington political circles.On the Social Security side CBO claims GDP will increase 1% if Americans can?t retire until age 70 because they?ll have to remain on the job longer. But we?re wondering?what jobs? We certainly don?t know of any national effort to encourage companies to hire (or even retain) 67 year olds?do you? And what will that mean for our children and grandchildren struggling to enter an already depressing job market hoping to build their careers?These are the questions Washington should really be asking. Let’s see a CBO report with more detail on these issues.


The Race to See Who Can Slash Social Security & Medicare Most

By |January 9th, 2012|Budget, entitlement reform, Medicare, Presidential Politics, Social Security|

For those of you who’ve been watching the GOP debates, no doubt you’ve heard the same consistent theme we have –America’s middle class and poor must continue to pay the price for failed economic policies of the past. Once again, “shared sacrifice” really just means more of the same. Cut middle-class benefits to pay for tax breaks for the wealthy. The “real pain” and “get tough” strategies these candidates proposal target Americans who are already suffering in this economic nightmare, once again leaving those who’ve benefited the most untouched:The Huffington Post has a nice summary:

Rick Santorum Gets Tough On Food Stamps, Jon Huntsman Promises ‘Real Pain’

Moderator David Gregory pivoted to “substance” about 10 minutes after Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) suggested he should in Sunday’s NBC/Facebook presidential debate. Gregory asked former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman to suggest three areas in which Americans would feel “real pain” under his budget cutting regime.Huntsman responded: “I agree with the Ryan plan. I think I’m the only one on the stage who’s embraced the Ryan plan.”Most of his fellow candidates have danced around in their support for the plan because it’s seen as something akin to electoral poison. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) himself is now backing a plan he cooked up with Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.).Of course, while the original Ryan plan would definitively inflict pain (it would solve the problem of Medicare spending by providing Medicare recipients with a voucher designed to grow less valuable over time), Gregory wasn’t satisfied with Huntsman’s answer and pressed for “three areas.” Huntsman, after prompting, offered Social Security, Medicare and defense.Former Sen. Rick Santorum agreed with Huntsman on Social Security means testing, but went further, offering a plan to turn food stamps and housing assistance into block grants for states, in which recipients would be required to work and time limits would be imposed. This allowed Santorum to remind everyone of his role in the welfare reform fights of the 1990s.Santorum wants to do to food stamps, housing assistance and Medicaid what he did for welfare back then. The program was eliminated in 1996 by a Republican Congress and a Democratic president, and replaced with a time-limited program that cuts people off regardless of their family’s financial situation.It failed: Poverty has risen significantly since the program was eliminated and replaced. (It succeeded, however, if the goal was simply to take the issues of welfare and poverty off the political table.)Today, more than 46 million people live in poverty, the highest since the Bureau of Labor Statistics began counting more than half a century ago.That model, said Santorum, should be applied to other assistance programs, cutting families off without regard to their current situation but instead based on timelines set by Congress.”We’ve gotta block-grant [food stamps] and send it back to the states, just like I did with welfare reform — do the same thing with Medicaid, including housing programs, block-grant them, send them back to the states, require work, and you put a time limit on it,” said Santorum.”We’ll help take these programs, which are now dependencies,” he said, “and you help people move out of poverty.”But without a dramatic and unprecedented expansion of jobs that pay middle-class wages, it’s unclear where those tens of millions of people would find such work.


Aging in America

By |January 3rd, 2012|Aging Issues, baby boomers, entitlement reform, healthcare, Medicare, Social Security|

James Ridgeway at Unsilent Generation provides some desperately needed perspective on the reality of aging in America. Contrary to Washington’s popular “greedy geezer” mythology, our nation’s older Americans are not living high on the hog and are in fact facing an extremely uncertain future as Congress continues to find ways to balance our federal books with cuts to programs servingmiddle-class Americans.Make this among the first articles you share with friends and loved ones this New Year!

The Future of Old Age in America

Unsilent Generation, Commentary, James Ridgeway, Posted: Jan 03, 2012 WASHINGTON, D.C.–In her remarkable book The Coming of Age, Simone de Beauvoir observed that fear of aging and death drives younger people to view their elders as a separate species, rather than as their own future selves: ?Until the moment it is upon us,? she wrote, ?old age is something that only affects other people. So it is understandable that society should prevent us from seeing our own kind, our fellow men, when we look at the old.?This disconnect has, no doubt, been helpful to those who favor cutting the so-called old age entitlements, Social Security and Medicare — which, these days, seems to include just about everyone in Washington. Now that the congressional supercommittee, charged with reducing the federal deficit, has gone down in flames, some are calling for a return to the plan proposed by the chairmen who headed Obama?s Simpson-Bowles deficit commission last year. Like the supercommittee, the commission itself couldn’t agree on a plan for Congress to vote on.Debunked Myths IgnoredAmidst all the bipartisan warring, one thing most of these committee members agree on is that the budget will, in large part, be balanced on the backs of old people, through cuts to Social Security and Medicare. The only differences are over how these cuts should be made, and how large they should be.In the unlikely event that the rich are made to pay something toward deficit reduction, in the form of increased taxes, their contribution will pale in comparison to the share paid by elders in the form of reduced benefits. In part, that?s because the enemies of entitlements have succeeded in depicting these lifesaving government programs as the cause of our economic woes — a myth that has repeatedly been debunked to little avail.By extension, they depict our current fiscal crisis as a standoff between the old and the young, rather than the rich and the poor. Former Senator Alan Simpson, the Republican handpicked by Obama to co-chair his bipartisan 2010 deficit commission, was fond of talking about the perfidy of ?fat cat geezers,” who dared to oppose entitlement cuts at the expense of his — and everyone?s — grandchildren.Simpson?s image of old people — ?who live in gated communities and drive their Lexus to the Perkins restaurant to get the AARP discount? — seems to have gained traction as the dominant view of elders in this country. This belies the reality of the lives lived by millions of older Americans, for whom a comfortable retirement was never more than a distant dream. For them, old age means work or poverty ? or, sometimes, both.A More Rounded ViewRecently, I attended the annual meeting in Boston of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA), a research and education organization whose members study all aspects of aging. With 3,500 people in attendance, hundreds of sessions and a teeming exhibit hall, there was plenty of upbeat talk about the ?encore years.?But there was also a body of research and discussion that presented a more rounded picture of old age in America — a place where ?fat cat geezers? are far outnumbered by elders who, like Americans of all ages, are struggling to get by.In one exhibit on ?The Economics of Aging,? researchers from Wayne State University presented a study published earlier this year called ?Invisible Poverty,? which found that one in three elders ? including many living in middle-class suburbs ? cannot fully cover their basic living expenses, including food, housing, transportation and medical care. It also found that certain shortcomings in the way federal poverty statistics are compiled meant that poverty among older people was more likely to be underestimated.?This widespread economic struggle faced by Michigan seniors is fairly hidden from public sight, making it an invisible poverty that takes its toll on older individuals, their families and caregivers and the community at large,? says the study.Among the elderly poor are large and growing numbers of women. Consider the figures: over 40% of black and white women over 65 live alone, and over a quarter of these women are poor. They are likely to be isolated and they, too, are invisible.2 Million LGBT Elders Below Policy RadarAlso below the public policy radar, according to another study presented at the conference, are lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender elders — who are now counted at over 2 million and are expected to double in number by 2030. These people are far less likely to have partners or caregivers of any sort, because society banned or discouraged them.For these elders, and millions of others, Social Security is more than an ?entitlement? — it is a lifeline.According to a recent report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Social Security alone keeps 20 million Americans above the poverty line. It?s hard to argue that Social Security benefits are too generous, or that retirees enjoy extravagant lifestyles.The average Social Security benefit for 2012 stands at just over $1,200 a month. As the Center for Economic and Policy Research?s Dean Baker notes, ?More than 75 percent of benefits go to individuals with non-Social Security income of less than $20,000 a year and more than 90 percent of benefits go to individuals with non-Social Security income of less than $40,000 a year.?In addition, Baker points out:?The private pension system has largely collapsed and the current group of near retirees saw much of their home equity disappear with the collapse of the housing bubble. As a result, the situation of retirees is likely to be worse in the near future, especially after taking into account the growing burden of out-of-pocket healthcare expenses projected in the decades ahead.?So it is the search for work, not cleaning one?s fingernails or studying French to stave off dementia, that is now a major concern for many older people. Historically they have been fired from long-held jobs because of their costly benefits and diminishing ability to handle the job, but now employers are taking a fresh look at this situation.Business, as it turns out, may very well embrace the old — because they often come at lower wages, with no benefits and scant legal protection. Given U.S. Supreme Court rulings, the prospect of any of these people filing old age discrimination suits is unlikely. Rather than knocking them out of a job, it may turn out to be less expensive to keep on a skilled, elderly employee, perhaps at reduced salary and reduced hours, than go through the rigamarole of hiring a young, inexperienced person, who must then undergo training.A Different Society EmergingAs the GSA conference showed, there is no point in cutting entitlements to elders when, in fact, so little is known about their lives and their emerging future. It means there must be a full, open debate — not backdoor political maneuvering — on the issue.What may be happening here is the emerging outlines of a much different society than the one we now know: a society that, for example, will require a new service sector, a different slant towards medicine, which uses the old to assist the young, as friends and caregivers — instead of pitting generations against one another.The late Theodore Roszak, who described and named the ?counter culture? that took shape in the 1970s, thought old people were anything but a selfish bunch of useless geezers waiting to die. He called them an ?audacious generation,? opening a new world of energy and hope. Let us hope, in de Beauvoir?s words, that moment is upon us.James Ridgeway wrote this article as part of a MetLife Foundation Journalists in Aging Fellowship, a program of the Gerontological Society of America and New America Media. The article first appeared in The Guardian.


Payroll Tax “Holiday” Deadlock

By |December 21st, 2011|Budget, Max Richtman, Medicare, Social Security, stimulus|

Washington Should Pursue New Middle-Class Stimulus Plan in the New Year

So, it’s been another wild week in Washington as passage of a stimulus plan that once seemed a foregone conclusion faced unexpected defeat in the House.You don’t have to look far to see the hundreds of millions of reasons why this nation needs a stimulus package.For the unemployed now scheduled to lose their unemployment insurance benefits to America’s seniors on Medicare this legislation also included critical provisions necessary for their survival.However, this failure in Washington could havea happy ending. We say, let’s use this opportunity to craft a new stimulus approach–one that doesn’t use general revenue to replace diverted Social Security payroll contributions. Here’s reaction from our President/CEO, Max Richtman:

?Providing a middle class tax cut to help spur the economy is the right policy but cutting the contributions that fund Social Security is the wrong strategy. The House?s refusal to pass the Senate?s compromise stimulus plan now provides Washington an opportunity to craft a stimulus package that benefits average Americans without diverting funds from Social Security. We urge the White House and Congress to welcome the New Year with a new initiative promoting the most effective economic stimulus plan possible regardless of the partisan politics involved. There are more effective forms of stimulus which Congress should pass, such as the ?Making Work Pay? tax credit. Now?s the time to reframe the stimulus debate. Allowing millions of unemployed Americans, low-income seniors on Medicare, and Medicare doctors to face massive cuts or loss of benefits through Congressional inaction is simply unacceptable. Congress should act this year to pass these measures which have bipartisan support. Rather than beginning the New Year rehashing an old debate, we urge Washington?s leaders to throw out the political playbook and fight for the strongest possible stimulus package for America?s middle-class that doesn?t divert funds from Social Security.?? Max Richtman, NCPSSM President/CEO


Repackaged Medicare Voucher Plan is More Bad News for Seniors

By |December 15th, 2011|Budget, healthcare, Max Richtman, Medicare, privatization|

New political wrapping can?t hide privatization scheme in Wyden/RyanSenator Wyden and Congressman Ryan?s newly proposed voucher plan offers a slight twist on the same failed approach to Medicare reform that was originally offered by the Ryan legislation and rejected by the majority of Americans ? coupon care for seniors. The Ryan/Wyden voucher plan would shift a growing share of Medicare costs to beneficiaries without reducing overall costs in the program while undermining traditional Medicare.

  • Beneficiaries would be forced to pay more for Medicare benefits because premiums would be indexed to the gross domestic product, plus 1 percent, which historically has risen far more slowly than health care costs.
  • The Ryan-Wyden plan could actually increase Medicare costs because it expands private Medicare plans that cost an average of 10 percent more than what the same coverage would cost in traditional Medicare.
  • If younger retirees enter the new program and the oldest and sickest remain in traditional Medicare, the program will be faced with a pool of increasingly costly beneficiaries. Medicare spending would go up and seniors who remain in traditional Medicare would see their costs go up as well.

?While some in Washington remain convinced private insurers can provide more cost-effective coverage for seniors than Medicare, the facts prove otherwise. Private Medicare Advantage plans have already shown this to be a false promise. What this Ryan/Wyden plan would do is drive younger and healthier seniors out of traditional Medicare, leaving the government with a pool of increasingly costly beneficiaries. Medicare spending will increase and seniors who remain in traditional Medicare will see their costs go up as well.The only winner in this privatization plan would be private insurers who would be given the ability to cherry-pick the nation?s healthiest seniors from the traditional Medicare program, allowing it to whither on the vine. America?s seniors understand how vital Medicare is to the health of our nation and want to find ways to strengthen the program for future generations. But this proposal increases costs for everyone while ignoring the core issue of rising health care costs. That?s not reform?that?s the end of Medicare as we know it.? Max Richtman, NCPSSM President/CEO



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