Comment by JumpCrisscross
2 days ago
> can’t solve that by taking away existing pensions
Of course you can. Pensions are a form of debt. If the state is bankrupt, it's reasonable to trim its creditors. Pensioners included. (The politically-savvy way to do this is probably to spin off the pension fund as its own entity and then default on bonds, which the pension fund would hold alongside others. Then leave it to the pensioners to figure out how they haircut themselves.)
You could also raise taxes as an alternative. I realize this won't be popular with some, however its not unreasonable, depending on how you do it.
> You could also raise taxes as an alternative
The tax base is mobile in a way expenses are not.
I'll speak to this personally. In April 2021 New York City raised its top tax rates. I'm only moderately wealthy, but that prompted my moving out of the state.
This is an even better argument for universal pensions (which isn't Social Security, as was never meant to be treated as a pension to begin with)
Same as universal healthcare, seems like you net benefit by removing these burdens from localities and businesses.
1 reply →
Why should young workers be asked to work more to provide a lifestyle to others that they can't themselves achieve?
Morally, they shouldn’t. But practically: because old people vote—en masse and consistently, and young people don’t. Until that changes, our systems will continue to be designed to transfer wealth from the young to the old.