Right-wing billionaires have long wanted to shred the safety net. Under Trump, they’re using lies and fears over the deficit to debilitate Social Security.

  • @Sludgeyy
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    08 hours ago

    A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investment that pays existing investors with money from new investors. The scheme operators don’t actually invest the money, and the scheme collapses when it can’t attract new investors.

    If the United States didn’t have younger people to pay into the system, new investors, the “ponzi scheme” collapses.

    The US government, the scheme operator, doesn’t invest the money it receives. Instead, it hands it to previous investors

    Now I’m not against a national insurance or something. But we know even with new investors the SS fund is going to run out.

    If the government saved the money it was paid and treated it like a real savings account or treated it like insurance.

    But the way it is now, it can’t run forever. Just like a ponzi scheme

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      47 hours ago

      It IS a scheme, in that it’s a system, plan, or action.

      It is NOT a Ponzi Scheme because it does not promise investment returns or exaggerate profitability.

      It’s there to keep retirees & the disabled out of abject poverty, which does not provide returns you can usually see on a balance sheet. Greater good & all that…

      • @Sludgeyy
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        27 hours ago

        I’m not arguing if the system is good or bad. I think there should be a good retirement system in place.

        Average person makes 65k in America

        SS is 12.4% usually split between employee and employer.

        That’s 8k a year.

        Average SS monthly payment is ~2k

        18 to 62 is 44 years of payment.

        65k × 12.4% = ~8k per year payment

        44 × 8 = ~350k

        62 to 78 is 16 years. 2k × 12 = 24k per year

        16 × 24k = ~384k

        So looking right now if I made average pay, paid SS when I was 18, worked until 62, collected SS at 62, died at 78. I would be looking at a 10% return on my investment

        Even more if I live past 78

        If I came to you said said. “Would you invest for the next 44 years and I’ll give you your money back after and 10% more over 16 years, but I’m going to have to have new people entering my “scheme” to pay you…”

        That would be a ponzi scheme.

        If the government simply kept the money paid and then paid it back with interest earned loaning it out until time to pay. SS wouldn’t be in a crisis.

        • @[email protected]
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          137 minutes ago

          Social Security is an investment in the health of our society, it’s not a financial instrument. You can’t pool risk and get predictable returns without cutting corners & dropping high-risk members (hello health insurance industry).

          It’s not a Ponzi Scheme by definition.