Social Security vs. Private Retirement Accounts - YouTube

Channel: Learn Liberty

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We know Social Security is going bankrupt.
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The question is, even if it weren鈥檛 going bankrupt, is this a good deal?
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What you see here is what the average 22-year-old college graduate can expect to pay into and
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receive from Social Security, assuming that Social Security is around.
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From age 22 onward, this 22-year-old starts to pay into the system and the payments get
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larger and larger as the 22-year-old starts to accrue a greater and greater salary.
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At age 67, our 22-year-old retires and, according to Social Security, the 22-year-old can expect
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to get $80,000 a year in Social Security benefits.
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Now, keep in mind, that number is not adjusted for inflation, so that鈥檚 about approximately
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the same as $25,000 a year today.
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Our 67-year-old now starts to pay, starts to receive from Social Security, and the amount
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that the person could expect to receive from Social Security drops down.
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It drops down because of the probability of the person being alive.
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Social Security, unlike private retirement funds, is subject to a 100 percent estate
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tax.
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What that means is, whatever money you have put into Social Security, once you die, the
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remainder that would have gone to you had you lived is now gone.
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It does not go to your estate.
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So the drop down that you see here is due to the likelihood of our 22-year-old, now
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aged, retiring.
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In total, this 22-year-old can expect to pay into Social Security about $840,000, not adjusted
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for inflation, and pull back out about $1.2 million, for a 1.6 percent rate of return.
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Now, suppose that our 22-year-old, instead of paying the tax money into Social Security,
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instead was allowed to divert those Social Security taxes into a private retirement account,
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made up of a mix of stocks and bonds.
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And let鈥檚 suppose this private retirement account makes 3 percent more than inflation.
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Over time, our 22-year-old pays in this money to the private retirement account and when
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the 22-year-old retires, now gets to draw down these red bars.
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In total, our 22-year-old paid in $840,000 and gets to pull back $6.8 million, or about
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five times what he or she could have expected to receive from Social Security.
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Now, the counterargument to this is, yes, we understand that private markets provide
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a greater rate of return than Social Security, but our money in Social Security is safe,
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whereas the private markets are subject to risk.
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That鈥檚 not entirely true.
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It鈥檚 not entirely true because you鈥檙e only guaranteed that the money you pay into
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Social Security will be invested in Treasury Bills.
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You are not guaranteed that the government will then pay you back the money that is invested.
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In fact, in 1983, the government changed the rules regarding Social Security tax benefits.
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Prior to that time, Social Security retirement benefits were not subject to income taxes.
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Starting in 1983, they became subject to income taxes.
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That鈥檚 the same thing as the government reneging on 15 percent of the Social Security
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retirement promises it made to you.
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If you really want the safety of Treasury Bills, you can get this yourself.
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Individuals are free to purchase Treasury Bills just like the Social Security Trust
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Fund purchases Treasury bills, and in fact, if you invested your money privately in Treasury
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Bills, the return would exceed the return that you can expect to get from Social Security
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and you would have actually more safety than you have with Social Security.
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Here鈥檚 our 22-year-old diverting these Social Security taxes into a private fund that invests
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only in Treasury Bills.
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Here鈥檚 the return that our 22-year-old can expect to obtain, or about $3.3 million.
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That鈥檚 around three times what the person could expect to obtain from Social Security.
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What this information suggests is that not only is Social Security a bad investment,
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but if you want the safety that Social Security purports to give you, you鈥檙e much better
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off investing in Treasury Bills yourself.