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Colorado PERA’s Web pages have been updated to reflect changes as a result of the enactment of Senate Bill 10-001.

 

Mandatory Social Security
(updated November 9, 2007)

You Need to Know:

"Mandatory Social Security would be felt in all 50 states and over time would add new beneficiaries to the program who would draw down benefits like other Social Security recipients, increasing financial pressures on the system...The least disruptive and most cost-effective solution would be to allow the well-established public sector retirement system to continue in its current form."

Terri Bierdeman, Chair, Coalition to Preserve Retirement Security

Effect on PERA Members
Congressional Proposals (Revised 11/9/07) 
Coalition to Preserve Retirement Security

What Mandatory Social Security Would Mean to PERA Members

One of the proposed solutions for the ailing Social Security system would require new state and local government employees to pay Social Security taxes. Mandatory Social Security coverage of new employees would affect PERA members, benefit recipients, and employers. If Social Security taxes were required for all new employees, contributions to PERA for new hires would have to jump to provide a plan that, in combination with Social Security, provided the same level of benefits that PERA now provides. To maintain the same level of benefits for new employees as current employees have, employer contributions for new hires would need to increase by over 6 percent of salary. To afford this increase, employers would have to cut services. While new employees could share in this increase by paying higher contribution rates than current PERA members, this could hurt recruiting.

If contribution rates stayed the same as they are now, benefits for new hires generally would be much lower. For example, a new hire who worked 30 years and retired at age 62 would receive a total of about 45 percent of Highest Average Salary (HAS) from Social Security plus PERA. The current PERA plan pays 75 percent of HAS for a member retiring with that service and age. The state, school districts, and other PERA employers would have difficulty recruiting if retirement provisions for new hires are much worse than the current PERA plan.

While benefits for benefit recipients probably would not be reduced if mandatory Social Security were adopted for new hires, any future enhancements to existing PERA benefits could become impossible.

The rationale for covering new hires under Social Security is that this would:

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Be best for new hires.

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Generate revenue to help solve Social Security’s funding problems.

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Be "fair" since some public employees receive Social Security benefits anyway.

These arguments ignore the fact that PERA and many other public plans already provide a comprehensive plan of excellent retirement, disability, and survivor benefits for their members. Social Security offset and windfall provisions are designed to prevent PERA members and retirees from receiving any unfair advantage by spending part of their career in Social Security-covered employment or by being married to a Social Security-covered worker.

The PERA Board is strongly opposed to mandatory Social Security, as are a number of Colorado employee and employer groups and retirement plans. PERA and other retirement systems gave information to the U.S. General Accounting Office for a study it finished in August 1998. The study examined the effect that mandatory Social Security would have on benefits and costs of public plans and other issues. The report concluded that new hires would have much lower benefits if Social Security is mandated, unless retirement contributions are dramatically increased.

More recently, PERA submitted testimony to the Social Security Subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee following a hearing on mandatory coverage in May 2003, that mandatory Social Security would hurt PERA and in the long run, it would not help Social Security. PERA wrote that “PERA members, benefit recipients and the Board of Trustees of PERA have worked hard for many years to maintain the ability to provide retirement benefits pursuant to the state law governing PERA, free from any mandate to cover employees under Social Security. The Colorado General Assembly has stated several times that it also believes that its employees are already well-served by existing retirement plans that do not include Social Security.”

A publication from The Brookings Institution said that mandatory Social Security coverage for all newly hired public employees would cost those workers and their employers $55 billion over seven years. In Restoring Fiscal Sanity: How to Balance the Budget, a chapter on the aging population presents a plan for Social Security reform. The plan includes a call for the forced participation in Social Security of all newly hired state and local workers starting in 2008 and projects that, from that point through 2014, the measure would increase Social Security revenues by $55 billion.

The Segal Company calculated in 2005 that the cost of mandatory coverage would total $44 billion over five years. Segal concluded that the expense would lead to higher taxes, reduced public employee retirement benefits, cuts in government services, or a combination of those things. Yet mandatory coverage would add just two years to the projected solvency of Social Security.

PERA and other members of a national group called the Coalition to Preserve Retirement Security (CPRS) asked the U.S. Senators and members of Congress from the states most affected by the mandatory Social Security issue to take an active role in ensuring that legislation does not include mandatory coverage for newly hired state and local employees.

CPRS also urged state legislators to let lawmakers in Washington know the damage that mandatory coverage for new hires would cause. SJR 10 was adopted by the Colorado Legislature in 1999 to encourage Colorados U.S. Senators and Representatives to continue their efforts opposing mandatory Social Security for Colorados state and local workers. The 2005 study by The Segal Company estimates there are 263,000 public employees in Colorado who are covered by PERA or other plans and not covered by Social Security.

Congressional Proposals on Mandatory Social Security

While there has been no direct action or any legislation proposed to implement mandatory Social Security coverage, meetings earlier in 2007 with majority and minority staff on the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Social Security revealed that there have been conversations about the mandatory issue. Apparently, these conversations have occurred in the context of informal member discussions about ways to pay for the repeal of the Government Pension Offset (GPO) and Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP), as well as provide funds to boost the solvency of Social Security. Staff hastened to add that no particular representative or senator was taking the lead in considering proposing mandatory coverage.

There have been a number of bills introduced in the last few years that would eliminate the GPO and WEP. The cost to eliminate these provisions, however, is about $60 billion over a 10-year period. Mandatory coverage of new hires under Social Security would be a terrible price for state and local governments to pay for action on the GPO and WEP.

In 2005 and 2006, President Bush proposed allowing Social Security-covered workers the opportunity to take a portion of their future FICA contributions and invest that amount in private accounts. Bush’s proposal gained no political momentum. Many Democrats say that Social Security is working well although minor adjustments may be needed. The Democrats also pointed out that the increase in federal deficits in the last few years and the cost of the Iraq war means that there would be no money available for Social Security transition costs if private accounts were allowed and reduced projected FICA contributions.

Nevertheless, many in Congress point to the 2007 annual report by the Social Security Board of Trustees that says the Social Security Trust Fund will not be able to pay full benefits after 2041 unless contribution income is increased, future benefits are reduced, or some combination of the two is adopted. While the current Administration isn’t likely to push a specific plan for changes to Social Security, the U.S. Treasury Department is trying to lay out a framework for analysis of various proposals. In its first issue paper, the Department explains that Social Security benefits paid are projected to exceed contributions by 2017. “Social Security cash flows become increasingly negative after 2017; as a result, Social Security will have a larger and larger impact on the rest of the federal budget, as general revenues and/or greater public debt issuance are needed in order to redeem trust fund bond holdings and fund full benefit payments until 2041.” In 2041, under current projections, all Social Security beneficiaries will have their benefits reduced by 25 percent compared to what is promised, if no changes in benefits or contributions are made.

Social Security reform could move to the front-burner in 2009 no matter who is elected President in 2008. As the conversations in 2007 point out, mandatory coverage is always near the table. Under pay-as-you-go rules that force members of Congress constantly to search for funds, the dangers are increased.

The Coalition to Preserve Retirement Security (CPRS)

The Coalition to Preserve Retirement Security (CPRS) was formed in 1999 and continues to develop strategies for convincing Congress and other parties that mandating Social Security for state and local employees should not be part of any reform package. PERA is a member of CPRS.

To learn more about CPRS, read testimony to Congress in hearings on mandatory Social Security, find out what CPRS is doing to preserve retirement security, and for more information about the issues of mandatory Social Security and Offset and Windfall provisions, visit the CPRS Web site at www.retirementsecurity.org. Feel free to enter your e-mail address on the home page if you wish to be notified whenever the CPRS site is updated.

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