'1 jbc: i>ULlUtilLOJiA OPINION Monday, November 13,1989 i Opinion Page Editor Juliette Rizzo 845- Social Security system in need of reform SOCIAL SeCURITY... THE MYTH! ...THE REALITY! 5^ ^ wav' tliin © RTKlrfSOH JR. to trash the entire Social Seer pi (M Chri The Social Security system ranks right up there with the Pentagon and HUD as one of the most worthless, money-wasting programs in the fed eral government. 1 am not real happy that I, and my employers, are paying a significant amount of money to fund the Social Security program. Next year’s Social Security tax rate will be 7.65 percent. In some cases, the combined employee/employer maxi mum tax is 30.7 percent. That’s big bucks in my book. And the worst part is that by the time I am old enough to draw any of my money out of the system, it will be defunct. Here’s why, in oversimplified math: Social Security benefits increase based on a “cost of living allowance.” The COLA is theoretically tied to the rate of inflation. Next year’s scheduled benefit increase is 4.7 percent, which means that the average Social Security benefit will double in 15 years and qua druple in 30 years. By the year 2020, the average benefit, if increased at the same rate, would be around $24,000 per year. By the same year, the number of eligible Social Security beneficiaries will have increased to between 50 and 60 million people. Do the multiplication and you real ize that we are talking about a yearly Social Security outlay by the govern ment in the year 2020 of $1.25 trillion (that’s trillion with a ‘T’). In numbers, that’s $ 1,250,000,000,000 . In order to fund this stupidity, every paycheck will have to be taxed for OASI (Old Age Survivors Insurance, a clever psuedonym for Social Security) at a rate of nearly 20 percent. In addi tion, your employer will have to ante up another 20 percent. Add to that your federal income tax (which on my last paycheck was 11 percent and for most people is higher) and any state in come tax (which Texas doesn’t pres ently have but probably will soon) and we’re talking 40 or 50 percent taxes on every paycheck. That would be the equivalent of working from January to mid-June for free, and then living on what you make the rest of the year. And that’s assuming federal income taxes won’t increase between now and then, which they definitely will. Obviously, the taxpayers of 2020 are not going to be willing to be taxed at such ridiculous rates. Something has got to give, and if you are a betting man, the smart money says that by 2030, when I turn 62, the Social Secu rity fund will have gone belly up and all the money I payed will have disap peared into the Land of the One Lost Sock, which means I’ll never see it again. So how do we fix the problem? Well, that’s a tough one, and I’m cer tainly not an esteemed economist on the level of Milton Freidman or Bob and Lynn Gillette, but here are a cou ple of common-sense suggestions: Limit future Social Security benefits to low-income beneficiaries. Or at least limit cost of living increases to those people who really need them. If there is anything more infuriating than giv ing my money away, it’s giving it away to someone who already has more than I do. If COLAs were limited, for exam ple, to couples making less than $15,000 and single people making less than $10,000, the savings would be in the neighborhood of five billion dollars a year. Another suggestion comes from C.L. and Martha Nordstrom, a con cerned couple in Colorado who, in the last four years, have voluntarily re jected approximately $65,000 in bene fits to support their belief that the sys tem should be changed. They propose a “means test” to determine if persons between the ages of 62 and 70 have sufficient income to forego all or part of their calculated benefits. To over simplify again, you just take all of a couple’s income, from all sources, and add it up. If it’s over a certain amount, say $30,000, then the couple would not be eligible to receive benefits until age 70. If the total income was less than $30,000, then the couple would receive benefits to increase total income to $30,000. After age 70, no restrictions at all would be imposed. That all sounds somewhat compli cated, but it really isn’t, and the savings would be in the neighborhood of $20,000,000,000 per year, based on an estimated 3.5 million people now re ceiving benefits averaging $6,000 a year who would not be eligible for ben efits or whose benefits would be re duced under the plan. Less than 10 percent of the money saved would be needed to increase the benefits of cur rent recipients who are at or below the poverty level. The rest could be in vested and used to help keep Social Se curity solvent. Probably an even better plan would System, and replace it with someJI of private Individual Ketiremem ‘ To count System. But there the mathstl getting too intricate for my liberal: j$DI brain. j Besides, these changes will r,: ^yes take place anyway, because the pc l. Cc who are living off of the Social See 2. M system right now have a pour- Man] lobby and are the people who arer.n likely to vote, which makes allthefiM a ' ticians too af raid of losing theirjok® )in have the guts to take any significant 0 a I tion. || b. And that is another reason we U]lf le perately need campaign and elecdP 0 ^ ref orm, but I’ll save that gripe for. c other column. Scot Walker is a junior joumiiQ ucs major and editor o/The Battalion. e. Corps doesn’t ‘make the grade’ in my booh Todd Greenberg Guest Columnist I never imagined I would find my self writing something critical of the Corps. I know that what I have to write about will make some people angry. I hope, however, that they will consider the points I am about to make — for an organization which is unable or unwil ling to cast a critical eye upon itself is doomed to become its own worst enemy. First, let me say I am a former stu dent and Corps member, and I believe in and stand behind the Corps. How ever, I am worried about the future of the Corps. What concerns me is the gradual trend away from teaching leadership, instilling discipline and building char acter. The Corps of today has a preoccupa tion with numbers. This preoccupation stems from a lack of leadership from the Commandant’s office and from the higher echelons of the Corps. Although there are many examples that deserve mention, the best example of what I am referring to is the scholas tic situation within the Corps. The Corps has found itself in competition with the civilians for better grades. It is in this way the Corps must con tinually justify its existence to its de tractors. In this situation, grade point ratios and retention rates become all important —more important, say, than producing good citizens and capable leaders for the military, government and business communities. How many times has a cadet heard the catch-all phrase “make grades?” Many who now utter these words seem preoccupied with the number of hours of Call to Quarters (CQ), grade point ratios and the grade rankings of va rious outfits, while some others even believe some Corps activities must be curtailed to provide more “time to stu dy.” Yes, the Corps must “make gra des,” but it must do so without losing sight of its reason for existence; all of the while retaining those items which make it unique among all other student organizations. In my junior year, my outfit won the Jouine award from scholastic excel lence and contributed to our batallion receiving the President’s flag. We ac complished this by teaching self-disci pline, responsibility and plain of com mon sense. We had no need for more policies and regulations — or additio nal CQ hours — and in no way did we diminish our participation in Corps-re lated activities. I am sure that creating more policies and enforcing them is much easier and less risky than providing the leadership that fosters responsibility, accountabil ity and self-discipline. Unfortunately, this is exactly what is occuring in the Corps today. My defi nition of leadership is “inspiring others to perform and accomplish the tasks placed before them.” Conversely, man agement is the “supervision of human resources for the purpose of making sure people follow and adhere to estab- The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Scot O.Walker, Editor Wade See, Managing Editor Juliette Rizzo, Opinion Page Editor Fiona Soltes, City Editor Ellen Hobbs, Chuck Squatriglia, News Editors Tom Kehoe, Sports Editor Jay Janner, Art Director Dean Sueltenfuss, Lifestyles Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspa per operated as a community service to Texas A&M and Bryan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editorial board or the author, and do not necessarily rep resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, fac ulty or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography classes within the Department of Journalism. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas A&M regular semesters, except for holiday and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are $17.44 per semester, $34.62 per school year and $36.44 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 230 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-1 111. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battal ion, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, Col lege Station TX 77843-4111. lished guidelines and policies.” It is evi dent that the latter course is the one be ing used most often today. This leads me to my final point. I as sume Maj. Gen. Darling means well, but he is merely a victim of the system he has served for so long. Managing ‘human resources’ is precisely the Air Force’s cup of tea.’ Unfortunately, he has forced this philosophy on the Corps through micro-management of Corps affairs — much to the detriment of practical leadership training. Yes, the Corps must “make grades,” but it must do so without losing sight of its reason for existence; all of the while retaining those items which make it unique among all other student organizations. I propose that those who are closer to the rank and file of the Corps, and hence, those who know the needs of their men, be given the authority for making the decisions which apply to their situations. I am, of course, referring to the outfit commanders. These men go through a protracted selection process which includes approval by the Commandant. However, they do not receive the authority commensurate with their responsibilities. For example, in order to excuse freshmen and sophomores from CQ, a military letter must be submitted to Corps staff (three levels higher in the chain-of-command) for approval by the Corps scholastics officer and the Corps commander. The outfit commander, though closer and obviously better informed about the situation, is not trusted with making such a simple decision. Sound familiar? This type of “stovepiping” was a contributing factor in our government’s failure in Vietnam. This type of distrust is symptomatic of the micro-management infesting the Corps chain-of-command. Frankly, I see little need for outfit C.O.s at all if they are not rightfully given the authority to make decisions that concern their people. 1'lie solution is to give more authority to those throughoutthe Corps’ chain-of-command and toil, them accountable for any mistakes;: bad decisions that may result. Faild will indeed occur, for this is part of; learning environment. With authoi comes rsponsibility, and therefore accountability. It takes all three, weighted equally, to become a leadt; And leaders are what the Corps intends to produce. Also, some degree of understand: is necessary on the part of thosewk oppose the Corps in realizing the Corps is indeed a valuable learning environment and a permanent as[»' of the University. It is only in these ways that the Corps will resume its mission to produce efficient and capable leaders and remain an asset Texas A&M University and thenaii Todd Greenberg is a graduate student and a guest columnist fori Battalion. /T ( < i .1 I I ■I < I > ( I I l \ L \ F 1 i 1 l 1 F ft 5 A