are confronted with serious issues every minute of the day. Grasping the underlying issues from the headlines is a difficult task. Give us ten minutes a day and we will help bring clarity to the chaos of the news, policy and issues.
Increase in Test Taking, Not Marred by Typical Decrease in Score
Paul Gasbarra
Aug 27, 2008
According to two articles today, SAT scores remained flat this year. A graph in the Wall Street Journal’s coverage illustrates that this news comes after two years of decline from a peak reached in 2005. While WSJ’s headline “Class of ’08 Fails…” sets a dour scene, the people who run the test are actually encouraged by the results.
A couple of interesting items have come up in the past few days on the cost of college as well as the pay off that college provides to its graduates. The Associated Press revealed the results of a report by the Sallie Mae foundation, which showed that when looking for a college, 40 percent of families don’t limit their school searches based on cost.
Social Security, the nation's retirement system, is one of the most popular government programs in U.S. history. But now that the first of the 76 million baby boomers have started retiring -- and are projected to live longer than any previous generation of Americans -- the question is how this program can be sustained.
Redefine the contract to make Social Security sustainable
Put Social Security taxes in private sector investments
Make economic security in retirement a personal responsibility
To ensure that Americans are able to retire with security and dignity, government must keep Social Security intact. Even if it requires raising taxes or reducing spending on other government programs, the promise of income security in retirement years must be honored. It is immoral and unthinkable to arbitrarily reduce benefits to older Americans because of the pressures created by a large number of individuals in the baby boom generation. In any case, maintaining this program over the long run requires only modest adjustments of revenues and expenses. Read More
Flaws in Social Security can't be fixed with a little tinkering. To avoid stark choices early in the next century including sharp hikes in taxes and reductions in other government programs significant changes must be enacted to meet the needs of future retirees. The demographics of the baby boom generation and the smaller generation that follows it require pared down benefits and revised eligibility rules. Commitments to older Americans must not jeopardize other public needs. We will have to trim benefits, especially to those who need them least, and reverse the trend to early retirement. Read More
Social Security benefits shouldn't be drastically altered, and retirement income shouldn't be made a personal responsibility. We should focus on finding a way to pay the benefits to which recipients are entitled. The key to making this program financially secure is to get higher returns on the taxes paid into Social Security. Rather than investing taxes in low-yield government bonds, the federal government should invest Social Security taxes in the private marketplace to increase the yield. Read More
Social Security is fundamentally flawed. Modest reforms won't be sufficient to provide financial security for future generations of retirees. The Social Security Trust Fund should be replaced by mandatory personal savings accounts, which make individuals responsible for their own financial security in retirement. Mandatory personal savings accounts would either wholly or partly replace the current system, putting responsibility for retirement security where it should be, on each of us individually. Read More
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