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Politics : HOWARD DEAN -THE NEXT PRESIDENT? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (2972)2/18/2004 3:12:50 PM
From: MSI  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3079
 
That's how Dr. Dean was torpedoed. I was wondering how they would manage it, and it happened before our eyes.

A very thoughtful piece, something not seen, obviously, anywhere in the major media.

It's interesting to note the approaching consolidation of the remaining media as well.

Upcoming is a series of assaults on internet through gov't/business partnership under the flags of convenience: (a)terrorism/security by DOJ demanding total control of internet traffic through ISPs and new laws on domain-name information restrictions, (b)divine right of capital by the FCC protecting broadband suppliers who play ball.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (2972)2/25/2004 10:49:55 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3079
 
We sure need Howard now that Greenspan talks about Social Security cuts.

Greenspan Urges Social Security Cuts

Wed Feb 25

news.yahoo.com Add Business - AP to My Yahoo!

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON - Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan , stepping into the politically charged
debate over Social Security said Wednesday the
country can't afford the benefits currently promised to the baby boom
generation.

He urged Congress to trim those benefits to
get control of soaring budget deficits, which
he said threatened a "very debilitating" rise
in interest rates in coming years.

Democratic presidential candidates
denounced his proposals, and President
Bush (news - web sites) and other
Republicans sought to distance themselves
from the Republican Greenspan.

The central bank chairman also repeated his
view that Bush's tax cuts should be made
permanent to bolster economic growth. He
said the estimated $1 trillion cost should be
paid for, preferably, with spending cuts so
the deficit would not be worsened.

As for specifics on trimming Social Security,
Greenspan told the House Budget
Committee that one possibility would be to
switch to an alternative measure of inflation
for annual cost-of-living adjustments. Instead
of relying on the Consumer Price Index
(news - web sites), he suggested switching
to a new chain-weighted CPI that gives lower
inflation readings and thus would mean
smaller payment increases.

Greenspan, who turns 78 next week, also
suggested tying the retirement age for full
benefits to longer lifespans with the age
continuing to rise. The 65-year age for
retiring at full benefits started increasing last
year and now stands at 65 years and four
months. It will increase to 67 over the next two decades and then stop
rising.

Greenspan said his comments simply voiced views he has held since he
chaired a blue-ribbon commission two decades ago. But the remarks set
off a political storm.

Democratic front-runner Sen. John Kerry (news - web sites) said the way
to address the deficit was to roll back tax cuts for the wealthy and "the
wrong way to cut the deficit is to cut Social Security benefits. If I'm
president, we're simply not going to do it."

Sen. John Edwards (news - web sites), D-N.C., called it "an outrage' for
Greenspan to call for cuts in Social Security while at the same time
endorsing making Bush's tax cuts permanent. Rep. Dennis Kucinich
(news - web sites), D-Ohio, went even further and called for Greenspan
to resign as Fed chairman, saying his comments were "a disgrace."

Bush said Social Security benefits "should not be changed for people at
or near retirement."

Underscoring the view that Congress is not about to touch Greenspan's
suggestions, especially in an election year, Republican House Speaker
Dennis Hastert was asked to comment on the proposals and replied
only, "He's a fine man."

In his testimony before the Budget Committee, Greenspan said the
current deficit situation, with projected record red ink of $521 billion this
year, will worsen dramatically once the 77 million members of the baby
boom generation start becoming eligible for Social Security benefits in
just four years.

He said projections show the country will go from having just over three
workers supporting each retiree to 2.25 workers for every retiree by 2025.

"This dramatic demographic change is certain to place enormous
demands on our nation's resources - demands we will almost surely be
unable to meet unless action is taken," Greenspan said. "For a variety of
reasons, that action is better taken as soon as possible."

He said taking action now would mean that people still working would
have time to adjust their retirement savings plans to deal with smaller
Social Security benefits.

Greenspan said at some point the country needed to face the fact that
the government has promised more in entitlement benefits than it can
afford to pay. He said the problem was even worse for Medicare because
it was impossible to estimate what types of costly medical advances will
be available in coming years.

He did not mention that Congress late last year, at Bush's urging,
adopted a new prescription drug benefit as part of a Medicare overhaul
now estimated to cost $540 billion over the next decade.

"I am just basically saying that we are
overcommitted at this stage," Greenspan said in
response to committee questions. "It is important
that we tell people who are about to retire what it is
they will have." He warned that the government
should not "promise more than we are able to
deliver."

While the country is currently enjoying the lowest
interest rates in more than four decades, Greenspan
warned that financial markets will begin pushing
long-term rates higher if investors do not see
progress in dealing with the projected huge deficits
that will occur once baby boomers begin retiring.

As he has in the past, Greenspan called on Congress
to reinstitute rules that require any future tax cuts
or spending increases to be paid for either by
spending cuts in other areas or increases in other
taxes. Bush has called for the rules to cover only
spending increases, not tax cuts.