Security (or Medicare) as a seesaw in which payments made by workers are on
one side and benefits collected by retirees are on the other. The program is
solvent as long as the seesaw balances. As the number of workers on one side
shrinks while the number of retirees on the other side grows, the seesaw begins
to tip. In theory, fixing the problem is easy. We can take more from current
workers, either by increasing the payroll tax or by making them more productive
and raising their incomes (so that the same tax generates more revenues). Or we
can give less to retirees, either by cutting their benefits or by raising the
retirement age. That is the very simple economic crux of the problem. Of course,
if you think any of these solutions would be politically palatable, please go back
and read Chapter 8 again.
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