A Glaring Omission in the Latest Social Security Report

Apr 30, 2019 / Amanda Chase, Horsesmouth Assistant Editor

The latest report on Social Security’s trust funds came out last week, and it revealed that the troubles in Social Security’s futures aren’t just going away. Yet the report also revealed another glaring problem that has now gone on for years: The two leadership spots that are supposed to be filled by members of the public remain vacant. Until public trustees take their role among the other members of the trust funds’ governing body, the general public will lack the direct representation they deserve in having their interests in the future of Social Security acknowledged.

At first, appointed government officials were solely responsible for the management of the trust funds, with the Secretary of the Treasury taking the key management role within the group. More recently, though, legislators recognized that including members of the public among the trustees of Social Security’s trust funds would ensure that average Americans would have a voice in the way the program operates. The Social Security reform commission led by former Fed chair Alan Greenspan in the early 1980s recommended naming two public trustees to join the board. In 1984, those two spots went to Mary Falvey Fuller and Suzanne Denbo Jaffe, and since then, several different pairs of public trustees have offered their service to the Social Security program.

Since the late 2000s, however, the public trustee role has gotten embroiled in political controversy. The Social Security trustees reports had no public trustees among their signatories between 2008 and 2010, as lawmakers in Congress refused to confirm President George W. Bush's reappointment of public trustees who’d served since 2000. Legislators did allow President Obama to name public trustees to participate in Social Security’s report process between 2011 and 2015. However, subsequent political wrangling led to vacancies beginning in 2016 that remained open in the latest report.

The idea of having public trustees helping to oversee Social Security trust funds is in line with the fundamental concept of a government of, by, and for the people. Current members of the administration face political pressures that can lead to impairments in judgment, favoring short-term patches over longer-term policy decisions. By providing an outsider's perspective, a public trustee can provide a useful check against misleading or erroneous information coming out in the report. The results of the Social Security trustees reports have been consistent enough over the years that there’s little reason to believe that there’s any immediate issue about the veracity of the reports themselves. Nevertheless, the longer the board of trustees goes without having representation from the general public, the greater the chances that the reports on which millions rely to understand the financial condition of Social Security won’t fairly address the concerns that typical Americans have about the program and its future.

You can find the full article at The Motley Fool.

 

IMPORTANT NOTICE
This material is provided exclusively for use by individuals with an active license to the Savvy Social Security Planning Program. Use of this material is subject to the Social Security Planning Program Agreement and applicable copyright laws. Unauthorized use, reproduction or distribution of this material is a violation of federal law and punishable by civil and criminal penalty. This material is furnished “as is” without warranty of any kind. Its accuracy and completeness is not guaranteed and all warranties express or implied are hereby excluded.

© 2024 Horsesmouth, LLC. All Rights Reserved.