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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

America's Granny-Bashers: Different Facts but the Same Policies

By Dean Baker, AlterNet. Posted March 17, 2009.


The top priority for the anti-Granny lobby is to cut Social Security and Medicare.
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The granny basher crew constitutes one of the largest and most determined lobbies in Washington. The top priority for this lobby is to cut Social Security and Medicare.

The lobby includes the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, with an endowment of more than $1 billion from the private equity tycoon himself. It also includes The Washington Post, which liberally sprinkles assertions about the need to cut Social Security and Medicare in both its news and editorial pages. Many prominent members of Congress also belong to the club, along with much of the punditry who make their living pronouncing on public policy.

The granny bashers' theme is that Social Security and Medicare constitute an enormous generational injustice because the young, and those yet to be born, will be forced to pay for the cost of these programs for retirees and current workers. Of course, the reality is that the vast majority of the granny bashers' horror stories about generational inequity stems from the cost of sustaining a broken health care system

If the United States fixed its health care system, then the granny bashers' horror story disappears. In fact, even if we don't fix the health care system, we can make most of the horror story disappear by just allowing seniors to buy into the health care systems of countries that have more efficient systems than the United States

But the granny bashers are not interested in fixing the health care system; that would involve confronting powerful interest groups like the insurance and pharmaceutical industries and the doctors' lobby. In fact, the granny bashers are not really even particularly interested in generational equity. This is just an excuse for their real agenda: cutting Social Security and Medicare.

This point is demonstrated by the fact that their policy recommendations never change even when the evidence changes in very big ways. The granny bashers have treated us to three very dramatic examples of this "different facts, same policy" approach in the last 15 years.

The first example is slightly technical. It has to do with the claim that the consumer price index (CPI) overstates inflation.

The CPI is our yardstick for measuring how much better off people are getting through time. If wages grow 4.0 percent and the CPI tells us that inflation is 3.0 percent, then real wages have grown by 1.0 percent. However, if the true rate of inflation is just 2.0 percent because the CPI overstates inflation by 1.0 percentage point a year, then real wages have grown by 2.0 percent (4.0 percent wage growth, minus 2.0 percent inflation).

Fifteen years ago, many economists and pundits (including much of the granny basher lobby) embraced the claim that the CPI overstated the true rate of inflation by at least 1.0 percent a year. If this claim was true, then it undermined the core of the granny bashers' story. It would mean that our children and grandchildren would be far richer than we ever imagined possible and that many older workers and elderly grew up in poverty.

If annual wage growth was 2.0 percent rather than 1.0 percent, then in 40 years, wages will be more than 220 percent of the current level, instead of just 50 percent higher. The granny bashers embraced the claim of the overstated CPI in order to justify cutting Social Security (retiree benefits are indexed to the CPI), but they never followed through the logic of this claim for their generational equity story.

This would be comparable to Al Gore maintaining a drive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions even after new evidence showed that the planet was actually cooling. Honest people don't ignore such evidence.

The exact same issue arises with the speed up in productivity growth in the mid-90s. The granny basher crusade against Social Security and Medicare dates from the mid-80s when productivity growth was just 1.5 percent a year.

Productivity growth determines the rate at which society can, on average, get richer. In the mid-90s, the rate of annual productivity growth increased by a full percentage point - in effect bringing about the more rapid gains in real income that would have been implied by an overstated CPI. However, none of the granny bashers noted how the productivity growth speedup had enormously improved the prospects of future generations. They just maintained their insistence on cutting Social Security and Medicare.

Finally, the recent collapse of the housing bubble and the resulting stock market plunge have reduced the wealth of older workers and retirees by close to $15 trillion. This is a transfer to the young, since they will be able to buy the housing stock and the corporate capital stock for a far lower price than they would have expected to pay just two years ago.

Remarkably, the granny basher crew has somehow failed to notice this enormous transfer of wealth from the old to the young. They just continue their crusade to cut Social Security and Medicare as though nothing has happened.

It should be evident that the granny bashers don't care at all about generational equity. They care about dismantling Social Security and Medicare, the country's most important social programs. It is important that the public recognize the granny bashers' real agenda so that they can give them the respect they deserve.


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See more stories tagged with: medicare, social security, retirement security, peterson foundation, peterson

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

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Take the Next Step Mr Baker ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Mar 17, 2009 12:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"They care about dismantling Social Security and Medicare, the country's most important social programs. It is important that the public recognize the granny bashers' real agenda so that they can give them the respect they deserve."

Yes, they want to dismantle Social Security and Medicare but their real agenda is to turn the United States into a third world country where their corporations can run the government for a profit and run the people into the ground.

This is about an agenda to completely discourage and instill fear into the population so that they can control the agenda ...

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Dean, please learn some math.....
Posted by: J- on Mar 17, 2009 7:51 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If annual wage growth was 2.0 percent rather than 1.0 percent, then in 40 years, wages will be more than 220 percent of the current level, instead of just 50 percent higher.

If? If I saw flying monkeys, I'd be in the land of Oz. Me in the land of Oz and consistent 2% wage growth in this country have about the same likelyhood.

And no, the "granny bashers" have a legitimate point: the Baby Boomers (I'm fairly sure you're one with the zeal at which you're defending this entitlement) will leave Generations X and Y with more than $58 TRILLION in unfunded Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security payments. With the tax increases likely needed to pay for these benefits, discounted housing and stocks will remain unafordable.


Also, remember that the average wage for a Gen X male is less than what his father likely made 35 years ago, in adjusted dollars. That's right, we're doing the same job for less money. A lot of that, Dean, has to do with the Boomer greed that has led to the obscene rate of outsourcing and offshoring done by the Boomer elite in this country to maximize short term profits.

So far, Dean, I'm seeing an obscene, forced transfer of wealth from me to you, and you're calling me a "granny basher" for questioning whether these programs as they sit are currently the best thing for the future of this country.

I'm also seeing that you're not reading repudible financial magazines such as The Economist which has stated on several occasions that that productivity in the US has not equivicated to wage increases, and that most of the spoils of increased productivity have gone to an increasingly wide gap between executive and labor.

Let me see, maybe I'm not a "granny basher", but you're mearly a "greedy geezer", demanding every dime of entitlement money you have coming, because God forbid you couldn't get a hip replacement in time for the spring open, and have my tax money pay the green fee. I'm not a "granny basher" simply because I would be one of those that question a program that has it's roots in the early 1930's, and might be due for an overhaul. I think maybe you are yet another "greedy Boomer that started thinking about retirement yesterday". And like most in the Boomer cohort, the responsibility lies with others, as long as you can find a way to justify it.

This is generational warfare, Dean, and articles like this show me you are leading the charge. Christopher Buckely has a book on this called Boomsday. If you're serious about it not participating in the fleecing of the future, maybe you could sign up for voluntary transitioning for the good of the country.

So, Dean, I would recommend some remedial mathematics courses at your local community college soon, before the program is cut to fund yet another entitlement for the elderly.

And, yes, in case it was missed, I find this article highly offensive and, as a long time reader and supporter of Alternet, would sincerely recommend not publishing this author ever again.

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Yes, I'm a granny basher
Posted by: Eddie Van Helsing on Mar 18, 2009 8:30 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And proud of it. Those old farts had their fun, giving me shit when I was young because I liked that "satanic" rock music and because I wore my hair long. Now it's payback time, you wrinkled fuckin' parasites!!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Yes, I'm a granny basher Posted by: wrinklemomma
» RE: Yes, I'm a granny basher Posted by: Eddie Van Helsing
» RE: Yes, I'm a granny basher Posted by: Frustrated Farmer
Need to cut Social Security and Medicare
Posted by: Frustrated Farmer on Mar 19, 2009 3:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the government had never 'stolen' hundreds and hundreds of billions from Social Security in order to "balance the budget" Social Security would be fine.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Anne in L.A.
Posted by: lawkoza on Mar 19, 2009 4:48 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am a 61 year old single female. It occurs to me that we should build concentration camps and send all of these useless people there. Let's just gas them. Why waste time starving them to death and letting them die of preventable diseases??? Obviously, I am not serious. But what is the difference between killing our elderly slowly by neglect or quickly and deliberately? What kind of a country are we? Of course, let's not stop with the elderly. There are other sick and disabled people we can do away with also.

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» RE: Anne in L.A. Posted by: lagerythym
SS threatened by bad loans
Posted by: jwgrant on Mar 19, 2009 10:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why do we never hear about the endless raiding of the SS fund by the same government that must (to the public) support Social Security for the workers.

While "protecting" SS the government covers-up the bad loans the workers are being forced to make to our own government.

I'm a 78 year old SS recipient (Kansas) wondering who approves these loans and who is getting the money?

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Mr Anthony D'Auria
Posted by: Tony D on Mar 19, 2009 11:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am 80 and have to pay for my health insurance and live on the small amount of SS and pension that I receive. My medical bills can approach over $20,000 a year. Compared with what we have given the banks in the bail out, I feel like a slave. Something is wrong with this country... of crooks.

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Ungrateful Bastards
Posted by: cherylholmes on Mar 20, 2009 7:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In good times we raised these ungrateful bastards, gave them our inheritances to help them better themselves because we wanted them to be able to have a better life than we did, and what do we get in return, cruelty and death...certainly no respect for their elders and betters!

Yeah, we're "useless eaters" to them..this is what they call us...same as the nazi's called theirs...and yes, we will all likely end up in those concentration camps thois country already has waiting for us...so why not just kill everyone off at sage age 55 no matter how wealthy, instead of making us starve to death and die slowly of curable illnesses? March us into the gas chambers or give us the needle at age 55 and be done with it....all of us! They friggin use us all their lives to raise their brats and take care of their snotty assed noses they still can't wipe as adults, then throw us away like the trash they've become. I hope they live to be as miserable as they've made us and grow up in a world of hate and abuse like they've also made for us...I hope like us, their wages and wealth will continually drop and they fail economically because of their own selfishness and greed,,uncaring bastards.

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» You had your chance. Posted by: Eddie Van Helsing
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