Social security and its discontents : perspectives on choice / edited by Michael D. Tanner.
Publication details: Washington, DC : Cato Institute, 2004.Description: vii, 386 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:- 1930865554 (cloth : alk. paper)
- 368.4/3/00973 22
- HD7125 .S5956 2004
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | NMC Library | Stacks | HD7125 .S5956 2004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039000729011 |
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HD7125 .B23 2005 Social security : history and politics from the New Deal to the privatization debate / | HD7125 .D495 2008 Social security : a documentary history / | HD7125 .S327 2012 The predictable surprise : the unraveling of the U.S. retirement system / | HD7125 .S5956 2004 Social security and its discontents : perspectives on choice / | HD7256 .U5 H53 2007 Hidden talent : how leading companies hire, retain, and benefit from people with disabilities / | HD7287 .M33 2016 In defense of housing : the politics of crisis / | HD7287.92 .U54 I53 2012 Independent for life : homes and neighborhoods for an aging America / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Publisher description: Social Security is the largest government program in the world. But it is also a deeply troubled one, on the verge of financial collapse. Within 15 years Social Security will begin running a deficit. Overall, the program is more than $26 trillion in debt. Without fundamental reform it will not be able to pay the benefits it has promised to our children and grandchildren. That has prompted the most far-reaching discussion of the purpose and structure of Social Security since the program was enacted in 1935. Not so very long ago, Social Security was rightly regarded as the "third rail" of American politics-touch it and your career dies. But no longer. Polls today show that the vast majority of Americans support proposals that would allow younger workers to privately invest at least part of their Social Security taxes through individual accounts. For more than 25 years the Cato Institute has led the debate for Social Security reform, arguing that the program is fundamentally flawed and calling for greater freedom and choice for working Americans. Social Security and Its Discontents represents the best of Cato's publications on the issue. It includes essays by the nation's top economists and Social Security experts, discussing Social Security's finances; the urgent need for reform; how the program treats women, minorities, and low-income workers; and the options for reform.
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