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Politics, Footnotes, and Your Children

Your grandmother has been living it up, spending money you never knew she had. The surprise comes when she dies and the executor of her estate informs you that, without your knowing it, she borrowed against your 401k plan.

Please surrender it.

That, in a highly personalized way, is the problem economist Lawrence J. Kotlikoff has been dealing with, only he does it by measuring what all the grandmas are doing to all the grandchildren. He calls it generational accounting.

Unfortunately, the people who should be talking about the problem aren't.

"You know," he says, "it has disappeared from the budget altogether now. It was in two Bush budgets. It was in the first Clinton budget, too, but as a footnote. After there was more discussion of those few pages than the entire budget, the subject was dropped."

Now, Professor Kotlikoff said, the subject is completely politicized.

I asked him to explain.

"The CBO ( Congressional Budget Office) doesn't want to publish new work that colleagues have done."

Generational accounting isn't sexy like the spending and activities of the CIA, NSA, or Men in Black. But it is far, far more powerful. Professor Kotlikoff, an economist at Boston University, is its originator and prime mover. His approach to government policy analysis, which is likely to put him on the Nobel short list one day, has rapidly been adopted by at least 25 nations.

Why did they adopt his method of accounting for the "inter-temporal" distribution of government costs? Because every nation is struggling with the same grandma versus grandchild questions that we face right here: whether the next generation is going to suffer from "taxation without representation" as they are given whopper tax bills by the previous generation.

Moments later, speaking at a meeting jointly sponsored by the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank and the National Center for Policy Analysis, Professor Kotlikoff said that unless there were major policy changes the lifetime tax rate on the next generation would be nearly 50 percent. That's a lot higher than the 30 to 33 percent that current taxpayers have experienced. Worse, the longer the delay, the more difficult it would be to make changes anyone could imagine.

In the event this is all new to you, let me explain. Governments make promises in two forms. The best known form is debt: they borrow from people today with the promise of returning the money, with interest, in the future. We read a lot about this type of promise because lots of people understand it, even if the numbers are in trillions. The second form of government promise is in programs--- things like Social Security and Medicare--- where there are no bonds but the government collects revenue today with the promise to make payments of income and benefits in the future. Very few people, including most politicians, understand this because it more complicated.

Which brings us to the unpublished paper.

Jagadeesh Gokhale at the Cleveland Reserve Bank and Benjamin R. Page and John R. Sturrock at the Congressional Budget Office, have updated the generational accounts. They also did a sensitivity analysis to see what government policy changes--- higher taxes, lower spending, reduced Medicare, etc.--- could put the generations on level ground.

I called Mr. Gokhale and asked for a copy.

After taking account of every dime to be paid in taxes while they are living, the current generation will pay the equivalent of $22.1 trillion in taxes… but leave a tax deficit of $9.4 trillion to the unborn.

The only way to make good on the promises is with higher taxes… or to renege by making reductions in promised benefits. Without changes, the lifetime tax rate on the next generation figures to 49.2 percent. That's a lot more than the 29.6 percent of my mothers' generation (1920); the 32.5 percent of my generation (1940); or the 32.4 percent of my children (1970). The researchers determined that it would take both a major slowdown in health care benefit growth and a near perpetual freeze on real government spending to drop the lifetime tax rate of the unborn down to 33.5 percent.

But wait. It gets worse.

Every year of delay by politicians will require more drastic action. Waiting until the year 2016 when the boomers retire, for instance, could bring this country to the edge of revolution.

Journalistic hyperbole?

I don't think so. Read this statement from page 24 of the report the Congressional Budget Office isn't publishing.

"Such a long delay in restoring balance will involve unrealistically high tax increases, benefit cuts, or purchase reductions. For example, it would involve defaulting on 95 percent of Social Security's implicit obligations to living generations."

Confused? Want to learn more? There are good resources on the world wide web.

Get original documents at the 1997 Social Security Trustees Report. On this site you can get a copy of your personal benefits statement, download portions of the report, or get the 200 page printed report mailed to your home.

Another good source is the National Center for Policy Analysis which offers links to other sites as well as their own research. Readers without computers can get a copy of a recent NCPA study, "The Nightmare In Our Future: Elderly Entitlements" by calling Jan Chisholm at 972-386-6272.

Still another source is the Concord Coalition.

If you are new to the subject, the NCPA reports are the most readable.

Only published comments... Apr 19 1998, 10:32 AM by scottb


Comments

 

ABModerator03 said:

[...] For an introduction to Lawrence J. Kotlikoff and the idea of Generational Accounting, visit my earlier column on the subject. [...]
February 22, 2007 10:50 AM

About scottb

Scott Burns has covered the changing world of personal finance and investments for nearly 40 years. Today, he ranks as one of the five most widely read personal finance writers in the country. Scott began his career as a newspaper columnist at the Boston Herald in 1977 where he was also the financial editor. Nationally syndicated in 1981 and now distributed by Universal Press, the column appears in newspapers from Boston to Seattle. In 1985 he joined the staff of the Dallas Morning News where his column quickly became one of the most widely read features in the paper. He left the Dallas Morning News in 2006 to become one of the founders of AssetBuilder and its Chief Investment Strategist. Burns is a graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1962). He has written four books, including "The Coming Generational Storm" (MIT Press, 2004) coauthored with economist Laurence J. Kotlikoff. His fourth book, also coauthored with Kotlikoff, was published in 2008 by Simon & Schuster. The paperback edition will be available in January, 2010.  "Spend Til' the End" uses consumption smoothing to demonstrate the errors of conventional financial planning. His business experience includes working as a staffer for a major consulting company and service as a director and audit chairman of a NASDAQ listed manufacturing company. He and his wife now live in Dripping Springs, a "hill country" town about 25 miles outside of Austin.


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