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May 22, 2013
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Make 70 the New Retirement Age for Medicare

By Michelle Malkin | April 14, 2011 | 16:33

A  A
Michelle Malkin's picture

It's time for a 21st-century retirement age. __If 40 is the new 20 and 50 is the new 30, why shouldn't 70 be the new 65? The last time Washington politicians tinkered ever so gingerly with the government-sanctioned retirement age, Ronald Reagan was in office and Generation X-ers were all in diapers. Since then, American life expectancy has increased by half a decade and continues to rise — while the "traditional" retirement age (established eight decades ago) has only recently begun phasing up to 67 and the official "early" retirement age (established four decades ago) remains stuck at 62.

There is simply no good reason 21st-century workers should operate under obsolete 1930s-era expectations and 1970s rules. We're living longer, working longer and, in general, holding down jobs that are far less physically taxing than those of previous generations.

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The reasons we should update these relics of our teetering federal entitlement programs are myriad. Demographic, actuarial and fiscal realities demand it. As powerless blue-ribbon entitlement reform panels have warned for years, the number of younger workers supporting Social Security beneficiaries is dwindling. It's a global phenomenon. The Economist magazine reports that, based on declining fertility rates, "by 2050 there will be just 2.6 American workers supporting each pensioner and the figures for France, Germany and Italy will be 1.9, 1.6 and 1.5 respectively."

This amounts to a budget-busting wealth transfer scheme whose lousy "investments" cannot be sustained unless basic structural reforms are made. Shared sacrifice means that every able-bodied worker — including federal employees and elected officials — must get with the times. Americans can no longer feel entitled to some 20 to 30 years of subsidized retirement, often collected over the course of many more years than retirees actually spent paying into the system.

_Raising the traditional and early retirement ages will mean extending workers' taxable earning years, fueling economic growth and putting a dent in our unfunded-liabilities crisis by delaying payouts. Some senior citizens' lobbying groups fret that today's workforce wouldn't be able to handle longer careers. Tell that to Betty White or Joan Rivers or Helen Mirren.

More to the point, as domestic policy analyst Andrew Biggs of the American Enterprise Institute observes, "Perhaps the best evidence that future Americans can work longer is that past Americans did: Despite poorer health, shorter lives and more strenuous jobs, in 1950 the typical individual did not claim Social Security until age 68.5. In 1950, more than 20 percent of Americans worked in physically demanding jobs; today only about 8 percent do. While today's technology-driven service economy places demands on older workers, it is hard to imagine that things were easier when Americans typically worked on farms or in factories."

This week, after rejecting the austerity measures of his own blue-ribbon fiscal responsibility panel last fall and attacking serious GOP attempts to address the impending bankruptcy of both Social Security and Medicare, President Obama will unveil his entitlement reform package. Yep, Barry-come-lately and his teleprompter are ambling down the grim-rose path. The main feature of the president's "bold" plan? Higher taxes on the nation's top wealth producers and earners. Translation: Same old, same old class-warfare cowardice.

For their part, both Republican House Speaker John Boehner and House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, wary of incurring the wrath of senior voters, have tiptoed, pirouetted and backtracked on updating the retirement age. They've promised to put "everything on the table" now — as long as everyone agrees later to kick the can down the road. Again.

As many entitlement reformers have noted, the very first American to benefit from Social Security, Ida May Fuller, collected nearly $23,000 in government pension benefits after paying in less than $25. At the rate we're going now, my kids and the Obamas' kids will never see a dime of what they are forced to put in. They'll already be waist-deep in the red as they enter their prime earning years. A truly modern government pension plan would follow the private sector by moving from a defined benefits plan to a defined contributions system — and by injecting free-market competition to improve returns.

Instead, we are dooming a generation of reverse Ida May Fullers who have no choice on where best to "invest" their automatically confiscated payroll taxes. The dawdlers and demagogues in Washington aren't "winning the future." They're robbing it.

Michelle Malkin is the author of "Culture of Corruption: Obama and his Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks & Cronies" (Regnery 2010). Her e-mail address is malkinblog@gmail.com.

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Comments

Michelle

Submitted by The Irishman on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 4:42pm.

Gen X-ers are generally considered those who were born in the 60s and 70s, much like yourself. With this knowledge it is reasonably conclusive that the majority of Gen X were most certainly not in diapers during the Reagan administration.

Maybe it was just a typo and you meant Gen Y.  

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Irishman

Submitted by Radical1979 on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 5:34pm.

Generation X is considered to go as far as up to babies born in 1982.

Proud member of the 53%!
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Hi Squirrel

Submitted by The Irishman on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 6:38pm.

"The last time Washington politicians tinkered ever so gingerly with the government-sanctioned retirement age, Ronald Reagan was in office and Generation X-ers were all in diapers." 

Gen X-ers were most definitely NOT ALL in diapers.

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"squirrel"?

Submitted by Radical1979 on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 6:42pm.

Way to make your argument.

Proud member of the 53%!
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No age raise.

Submitted by Red Jeep on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 4:43pm.

Let people graduating from high school now drop out of the system to invest on their own.

Teach economics in high school.

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If peoPle graduating from

Submitted by Radical1979 on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 5:31pm.

If peoPle graduating from high school now are allowed to opt out, we will still have a Problem funding Medicare. Better to raise the age limit now.

Proud member of the 53%!
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Well, before we raise Medicare retire age..

Submitted by Gary Hall on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 6:36pm.

.. I'd ask that the retirement age of all government employees, federal, state, county, city, district, and including teachers, be raised to a minimum of 62 or 65 first.

First things first.

(;~> gary

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Bingo!

Submitted by Red Jeep on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 6:39pm.

2 thumbs up! Now we are talking.

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Perhaps we should let the

Submitted by Dan The Man 2 on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 7:10pm.

Perhaps we should let the retirement boards decide this? And perhaps we should convert the retirement to some self sustaining plan where the employee and the government contribute to it and then have money managers and actuaries to determine when people can retire. Sort of like this http://www.dallaserf.org/ The plan is solvent and self governed and the government cant get its filthy paws on it.

Nuke em til they glow; then shoot em in the dark
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NO!

Submitted by sablegsd on Sat, 04/16/2011 - 9:34pm.

NO! There are plenty of places to save money without making American citizens work until they are 70! Not everyone has a cushy desk job and not everyone is in good health.

How about we defund the UN and kick them out?
How about we stop foreign aid?

There are millions of places to save money and put it toward SS and Medicare.

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Only problem with that plan, sablegsd, is that it---

Submitted by matthewdean on Sat, 04/16/2011 - 9:48pm.

makes too damn much sense.

Our politicians have a reputation to uphold, and fiscal responsibility never was, isn't, and will never be, on a politico's agenda.

I salute your plan, nonetheless.

MD

"The credibility of the story is undermined by the selection of sources." - (h/t Jer)
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