Social Security is in big trouble. Will a commission help?
It’s hardly a new idea– set up a blue ribbon panel of experts to tell us what we already know and propose a mix of the only three possibilities to help a program in financial distress– raise taxes, cut benefits, or raise the retirement age. Prior commissions have recommended all of these. Lorie Konish of CNBC starts her piece here recounting how a protester interrupted a January congressional committee hearing to consider a bill that would create a bipartisan commission to address Social Security. “A vote for a commission is a vote to cut Social Security,” the man shouted before being whisked out of the room. Konish details the problem and retells the story of The Greenspan Commission and its bipartisan work in 1983. The changes then were designed to ensure insolvency until 2057. But 2034-35 is now the reality for benefit cuts across the board to occur, absent reform. She notes lawmakers are divided on the path forward. Full piece here.