For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
March 30, 2005
President Discusses Social Security with Jan Mickelson, WHO Radio
Spring House Family Restaurant
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Audio
In Focus: Social Security
11:18 A.M. CST
Q The President probably wants the get in on this conversation.
(Laughter.) It's an honor seeing you again, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: How are you doing?
Q I'm doing great. You realize what a risk you've done,
latching on to the Social Security thing? You put our number one
Senator at grave risk. (Laughter.) He had to burn his AARP card.
(Laughter.) Do you realize what a cheap buzzard that guy is?
(Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: I remember the ads with the lawn mower.
(Laughter.)
Q Well, see, he can't use his AARP discount anywhere anymore.
He had to burn that card.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, you know, I appreciate the Chairman. He's
got some political courage, which is necessary to take on tough
problems. It's pretty easy to ignore problems in politics. What's
hard is to take on a tough problem. And both Senator Grassley and I
have dedicated ourselves to taking on the tough problem of Social
Security. And it's a problem.
Q I was also warned by the Secret Service to keep the microphone
away from you in a diner situation -- (laughter) -- because you have a
karaoke gland and break out into Alan Jackson songs at the drop of a
hat. Try to restrain yourself this morning, sir. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. If you've ever heard me sing,
you know it's not an issue. (Laughter.)
Q I think it was the Minority Leader, Harry Reid, said, Social
Security is a real crisis that exists only in one place, in the minds
of Republicans. How would you respond to that?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I would say that there's been a lot of people
who aren't Republicans who've looked at this issue and have said the
world has changed, and is changing, and that we have a problem for
younger generations of Americans. The Social Security trust, for
example, or the trustees came out with a report recently that said, in
2017, the Social Security trust goes into the negative; in 2041, it is
flat broke.
And the reason why is because baby boomers, like me and you, are
getting ready to retire, and there's a lot of us, and we're living
longer --
Q What have you heard? I mean, I wasn't planning on retiring.
(Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: Well, this isn't forced retirement. (Laughter.)
You get to be retirement age, whether you want to or not.
Q I'm still in denial about that.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I'm afraid we're headed there. But there's a
lot of us, and we've been promised greater benefits, and there's fewer
workers. So you've got more people getting greater benefits, living
longer, and fewer people paying into the system. And it's not going to
work. And so I think one of the things that's happened, in this 60-day
period that we set out to explain to the country we have a problem, is
that people are now beginning to understand there is a problem.
And the second thing that people are beginning to figure out is
that if you're 55 and over, you don't have anything to worry about, the
government is going to pay the promised benefits. And that's an
important thing for people to understand. There's a lot of people in
Iowa counting on their Social Security check, and they just need to
hear the truth and the truth is --
Q Five hundred and sixty two thousand of us.
THE PRESIDENT: That's a lot of you -- not "us," you're not one
yet.
Q Well, there's 562,000 Iowans that receive some kind of Social
Security benefit, and two out of five Americans do.
THE PRESIDENT: That's right, and that's why it's an important
program. That's why it's important to reassure those who receive a
check, nothing changes. The people who need to worry about this issue
are the younger Americans. They're the ones who are going to have to
pay enormous taxes or get enormous benefit cuts if this government is
not willing to respond now. And so, to answer the question of the
skeptics, we do have a serious problem.
Q The red state division and blue state division affects this
debate extremely importantly and efficiently. The Democrats are
marketing their opposition to any kind of Social Security form in the
following way -- I was up on their website, and this is how they
describe the nature of their opposition, and they have four different
categories that say women, blacks, Hispanics, and the disabled, all
receive a progressive return from Social Security; they get more than
they pay in. In essence, they say, you'd be an idiot, therefore, to go
along with any kind of reform, because they have it pretty good now, by
comparison, paying a little in -- or less in than other wage earners.
So why should we vote for something that, in essence, we think might
disenfranchise us?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, again, nothing changes if you're 55 years and
over. I mean, the progressivity in the system stays in the system.
Plus, you can make the system progressive for you're younger workers.
But a younger worker, whether they live in a blue state or a red state,
ought to be wondering whether or not the Congress has got the will
necessary to fix this problem, because if we don't, the system starts
going into the red, negative, in 2017.
Do you realize, in 2027, the cost just to make good on the promises
is going to be over $200 billion a year? It gets worse every year from
2017 to 2041. And so there's a huge hole that can only be filled by
dramatic benefit reductions and/or payroll increases. It's estimated
that in order to fix the problem if we wait, it will -- payroll taxes
will have to get up to 18 percent. And that's unsatisfactory, as far
as I'm concerned. And younger workers, blue state, red state, need to
worry about this problem.
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Now, older Americans do not. And I keep saying that, because I
know there's some propaganda out there that says to older Americans,
you know, old Grassley and Bush are going to take away your check.
Well, I've heard this before, every time I run for office. Nothing
changes. The government will keep its promise for those of us over 55
years old. It's younger people. This is a generational issue, Jan,
because many grandparents are now beginning to realize, they're going
to get their check, and they're starting to ask the question, what
about my grandchildren, what are you going to do about the
grandchildren -- because this is a serious problem.
Q I really appreciate the phrase you used, the ownership
society. That really works. Now, how do we get the people who view
themselves as recipients to see themselves as potential owners, so they
don't feel threatened by a transformation of a system that you have in
mind?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, first of all, you're referring to the
personal savings account aspect of a solution. And the reason I
believe it's important to encourage -- or to allow younger workers, if
they so choose, to set aside some of their own money in a personal
savings account, is threefold. One, they will get a better rate of
return on their money than they're going to get if the government holds
it for them. In other words, in a conservative mix of bonds and stocks
held over time, the rate of return on the money, the growth of the
money, the fact that it's going to be growing in a compounded way is
going to be greater.
Q Even if they haven't paid in as much, initially, to push them
into that progressive recipient category in which they now sit?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, you can do both. First of all, it's more
progressive, by the way, if you get a greater rate of return on your
money than if you don't. But you can also make sure the benefits that
end up being determined by Congress -- in other words, the benefits
that the government can afford -- they're progressive in nature, as
well.
But progressivity really depends upon how the benefit structure is
decided by Congress. We've got some money for some benefits, we just
don't have enough to pay the promises made to younger workers. And the
best way to allow a younger worker to more approximate that which the
government has promised is to let them earn a better rate of return on
their money.
Secondly, I like the idea of somebody owning something. I mean,
there is kind of this mindset that only a certain investor class can
manage their own money. I think that's a preposterous assumption. I
think everybody ought to be encouraged to manage their own money.
And, thirdly, we do this, Jan -- this is very important point --
this isn't a novel idea. Federal workers get to do this in what's
called -- in the federal employee program, retirement program. They
get to take some of their own money and set it aside so they get a
better rate of return than that which the government can get for them.
And Senator Grassley's employees get to do that, people working for the
Agriculture Department get to do it. My attitude, if it's good enough
for federal employees, it ought to be good enough for younger workers.
Q Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan keeps using another
very powerful word describing much of our social safety net,
"unsustainable."
THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
Q We can't do it. Demographically, as you mentioned earlier, we
aren't reproducing ourselves.
THE PRESIDENT: Right.
Q The same logic that you applied aptly to Social Security also
applies to our medical delivery system.
THE PRESIDENT: That's right.
Q Can we also move to the ownership concept in that, in medical
IRAs, and make those universal, maybe using medical IRA vouchers? And
how about using the Earned Income Tax that lower-income people get and
empower a savings account, so they get an ownership concept using their
money in that regard?
THE PRESIDENT: That's a very good point. As a matter of fact, the
Senator and I worked on Medicare reform. We wanted the current system
to work better for those people who are going to get -- that are on
Medicare. We wanted -- for example, I think there's a lot of benefit
to have a prescription drug plan available in Medicare because a lot of
people will be able to avoid major surgery by taking prescription
drugs. In other words, Medicare would pay for heart surgery, but not a
dime for the prescription drugs that might prevent the heart surgery
from being needed in the first place. So we modernized Medicare -- and
by the way, took care of rural hospitals in Iowa as we did so.
Secondly, though, in that bill is the notion of health savings
accounts, which provides an IRA-type approach, as you mentioned, to
encourage people to set aside money on a tax-free basis so they get to
make the decisions for their own health care -- in other words, own
their own health care plan. And it's a great idea that is now
beginning to take hold with a lot of small businesses and a lot of
employees for small businesses.
Thirdly, I've consistently proposed, Jan, that we have tax credits
for the working poor people so that they, themselves, can go in the
marketplace and own their own account. And, yes, so to answer your
question, absolutely, we can extend ownership.
Q So they earn -- they keep the time value of their own money.
That's the chief weakness of the current system.
THE PRESIDENT: On a tax-free basis, with the HSAs, by the way.
Q The birth-death issue that you made reference to, that's the
elephant in the room. We have to address that. Our culture is not --
it's not the first time this has happened. I was reading -- Teddy
Roosevelt addressed this in the early part of the century, dealing with
the birth dearth in the last century and he saw that that generation of
Americans were not reproducing themselves. And do you want to hear a
really snotty quote from Teddy Roosevelt? He said --
THE PRESIDENT: I don't have much choice. (Laughter.)
Q Yes, you do. You have the executive order. (Laughter.) It
says, "If you do not believe in your own stock enough to wish to see
the stock kept up, then you're not good Americans, and you're not
patriots. I, for one, would not mourn your extinction. And in such
event, I would welcome the advent of a new race that would take your
place, because you will have shown that you are not even fit to cumber
the ground."
So that's pretty -- that's a bully pulpit.
THE PRESIDENT: He was a colorful person. (Laughter.) That's what
I've been doing, using the bully pulpit over the last weeks to remind
people we have a problem. And it's easy in politics to ignore
problems. It's just easy to say, well, there's no problem.
But this is a serious problem for younger generations of Americans,
and I believe there is a duty as the President -- and fortunately,
Senator Grassley believes there's a duty as the Chairman of the Finance
Committee in the Senate -- to take on problems and not pass them on.
See, the easy route is to say, well, we really don't have a problem.
But what's going to end up happening is, in 2017, people are going to
show up to work and they're going to realize their payroll taxes have
gone up significantly to pay for promises that the government has
made.
And so I'm saying to people, now is the time to fix it. And I
think there's a political price for not getting involved in the
process. I think there's a political price for saying, it's not a
problem, I'm going to stay away from the table. So in my State of the
Union address I called upon members of Congress, both parties, to bring
good ideas forward.
Q Has the third rail moved?
THE PRESIDENT: I think it has. I think you'd made a mistake not
addressing Social Security. I think the American people, when they
figure out significant this problem is -- and they're beginning to
figure it out -- are then going to demand from both Republicans and
Democrats, leadership.
And I am -- I love this -- I love taking on big issues, because I
think that's my job. I think that's why the people of the country put
me in office. They expect a President to lead. And they expect the
Chairman of the Finance Committee to lead, as well. And, fortunately,
the good -- the good state of Iowa has got such a man in Charles
Grassley. I'm looking forward to working with him on this issue.
Q Can I expect that in an upcoming press conference that you're
attending that you will get up and address the nation and tell the
population of the United States, get out there and reproduce, or don't
cumber the ground? (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: No, you can't expect that. (Laughter.)
Q Get off the -- have some more kids or get off the planet.
(Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: You can expect me to keep talking about Social
Security. (Laughter.) You can expect, it because now is the time to
solve this problem. And I repeat to the grandparents out there that if
we do not act, your grandchildren are going to be saddled with a huge
burden. This government has made promises it cannot keep. It'll keep
the promises to those of us over 55 years old, but it has made promises
to a lot of younger Americans it cannot keep, and now is the time to
solve the problem.
And I'm going to keep working with members of Congress, both
political parties -- to do our duty. And I like traveling the
country. I like coming to the great state of Iowa. Been here quite a
few times, and may have to come back to keep pounding on the issue, but
it's the right thing to do, which is to address problems.
Q Mr. President, thank you for visiting Iowa.
THE PRESIDENT: Thanks for coming over.
Q Thank you for visiting us. And Senator Grassley, thank you
for gracing us.
SENATOR GRASSLEY: Pleasure to be with you.
Q Thank you for being here.
END 11:30 A.M. CST
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