The Guardian April 21, 2004


The Maestro of Fraud

Art Perlo

Bob Woodward called his biography of Alan Greenspan Maestro 
because the Federal Reserve chief is "a conductor, 
exquisitely attuned to every instrument in the political and 
economic orchestra", according to the amazon.com review. But 
after Greenspan testified before Congress February 25, proposing 
to cut Social Security benefits, Paul Krugman in the New York 
Times called him the "Maestro of Chutzpah". (Chutzpah is 
Yiddish for "a lot of nerve".)

I would be more blunt. Alan Greenspan is the maestro of fraud. 
Here's why.

Social Security was always a pay-as-you go system. People working 
today pay, through their Social Security taxes, for the benefits 
of retired and disabled workers. In a larger sense, it was a 
social contract — active workers will collectively support their 
retired parents, with the security of knowing that the next 
generation will support them. This system started in the 1930s 
and worked well for almost 50 years.

In the 1980s, when President Reagan was leading the attack on 
workers' living standards, the now-familiar problem of the baby 
boomers came up. The story told was, "when all the kids born in 
the 15 years after World War II retire, it will be impossible for 
the handful of workers still below retirement age to pay for the 
boomers' benefits."

In 1982, a bipartisan commission was appointed, which changed the 
way Social Security is financed. Payroll taxes were increased so 
that, in addition to paying for existing beneficiaries, money 
would be set aside to pay for the baby boomers' retirement.

As a result, tax rates for workers went up, and the extra cash 
was used to fund tax cuts for the very rich and the largest 
corporations. New York Times reporter David Cay Johnston, one of 
the country's best tax analysts, said that "people making $30,000 
to $500,000 a year subsidise people who make millions of 
dollars."

How much extra are we paying? Of every three dollars deducted 
from your pay cheque for the Social Security tax, two dollars go 
to pay benefits. With the other dollar, the Social Security Trust 
Fund buys government bonds, which are supposed to be repaid by 
the government to finance future retirement benefits.

Greenspan's testimony this February was his open declaration that 
he and Wall Street are prepared to go back on the deal. The 
working class has been, in effect, lending money to the wealthy 
for the last 21 years, and the wealthy don't want to return it. 
Greenspan has advocated that the US government repudiate part of 
its debt — the part owed to retiring workers.

Since the United States was founded over 200 years ago, a basic 
principle has always been that the US government will pay its 
debts. Normally, if the government's most powerful economist 
declared that the US will not pay what it owes, it would shake 
financial markets from New York to Paris to Tokyo.

It is only when the debt is owed to the working class that 
Greenspan thinks it's okay to be a deadbeat, and Wall Street 
cheers.

Where does the fraud come in? The 1982 commission was headed by a 
prominent Republican economist from the Nixon and Ford 
administrations — none other than Alan Greenspan. The maestro 
himself was the author of the deal he now plans to tear up. When 
he calls for robbing future retirees of their benefits, Greenspan 
is admitting that he was the chief conspirator in a fraudulent 
scheme to bilk the working class out of trillions of dollars.

In his testimony, Greenspan openly said that cuts in Social 
Security, Medicare and all federal funding programs should be 
first on the chopping block to pay for the Bush tax cuts, which 
go mainly to the wealthy. President Bush not only refused to 
repudiate Greenspan's remarks, but has campaigned for privatising 
Social Security. If Bush is re-elected, our retirement security 
will be in grave danger.

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People Before Profits, People's Weekly World http://www.pww.org

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