SOS2008 said:
Historically the line item veto has been a power, but I should just say "veto" in general. To which:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0816/p01s04-uspo.html
So some presidents just don't use their power in a beneficial way. And I did not say government can control the economy. I agree with you Zlex that no one can do that. However, something like raising rates does help to control inflation and the value of the dollar (though it would be preferable to address the root of inflation most specifically health care and education). Also, legislation such as removing the estate (death) tax could have more impact than one realizes. If other programs such as Social Security collapses, it will be because of measures such as this. IMO these are pretty significant effects.
The problem with Social Security was much larger than that.
The problem was that the bonds were self-bonds. If the bonds were liabilities on some third party's books, then they would have been actual assets for the gov't Trust fund.
The flaw was that they were self-bonds; promises for the gov't to tax a future generation and pay them back(future assets, additional borrowing from future economies) not promises by another party to pay the government back in the future. 'Bonds' would have been an OK way to hold a present value and convert it into a future value. Spending it immediately was not.
The flaw might have been doubly flawed, if the intent was to convert present value into future value. Future value doesn't exist yet.
It depends on how much faith you have in oversight over our non-centrally planned economies.
Future value gets created in future economies. Not only the value that future economies need for future economies needs, but future value that future economies need to fulfill promises made by earlier economies, in exchange for then current value. So, by what alchemy do agents convert present value into actual future value?
Well, winning WWII created future value.
So did building the interstates, etc.
An argument can be made that the government surcharge taxed an entire generation, then in the 70s, 80s, and 90s, did the equivalent of win WWII or build the interstate system (40s, 50s, 60s), and created the future economies that we will be entering, future economies that will be significantly equipped to produce future value because of government programs and actions.
Well, if that is the case, then all we have to do is sit back and reap the benefits of those future economies that will be here Any Day Now.
No, actually, even if the gov't did conduct a secret 40 Year Plan for us, in fact, all we need to do is get off our ass and go build those future economies. Apparently, to do that, as a good start, we need to be head-boppin' to lots of Ipods made in Taiwan. Maybe the Taiwanese gov't ran a better SS program than we did.
Their cap is at $42,000 NT/yr.
Did I say 42000 NT? I meant, $1200 US$/yr.
The current 'bulge' in benefits definition was enabled by a temporary demographic happenstance that is unsustainable in its present form.
It was a one time 'thank-you' to the Greatest Generation, as well as the ftinge hangers on who missed that nut busting cut but benefited from their 'thank-you' anyway,
SS will revert back to FDR's original unabused vision. The current benefits schedule was a one time deal. A temporary demographic bulge was milked to:
a] Say 'thank-you' to the Greatest Generation ... and others, totally by accident of birth, not deed.
b] Buy votes cast long ago from old fogeys long dead.
...take your pick.
The fact of its bulge was used as the very excuse to milk it.
But stick a fork in SS "as it is," because "as it is" is unsustainable.