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Linking Social Security and education can
fund both issues
Newswise — It doesn’t take a psychic to
predict that this year’s election season
will feature plenty of debates on Social
Security and education. Usually, the two
hot-button topics are addressed separately,
as few people see a direct link between
paying for schools and funding retirements.
But the two issues should be linked, says
economist Michele Boldrin, the Joseph Gibson
Hoyt Distinguished Professor in Arts &
Sciences at Washington University in St.
Louis.
Just as younger generations take care of
their elders as a kind of “return” on their
parent’s investment, so too can the U.S.
invest in the educational needs of its
children and have the debt so accumulated be
paid off to retirees when it comes due.
The key is to virtually do away with paying
for schools through property taxes and to
stop funding public pensions through the
social security tax.
“The cost of education should be treated as
accumulation of debt toward the older
generations,” Boldrin says. “From the time
students start kindergarten until the time
they finish their education, they are in a
certain sense taking on debt toward the
older generation, a debt that should be
repaid when they enter the workforce. The
debt could be paid off like a mortgage, all
at once, or in fixed amounts every month.
Either way, that money would be their social
security contributions. The proceedings so
obtained would go toward paying part of the
pensions.”
Under the current system, people who don’t
have children, or whose children are grown
don’t have an incentive to pay for schools.
This is shortsighted, says Boldrin.
Based on research he conducted with Ana
Montes at the Universidad de Murcia in Spain
and other coauthors, Boldrin says publicly
financing education should be viewed as a
loan from the middle-aged to the young
generation.
“The loan finances a young person’s
accumulation of human capital. Twenty years
from now, those children are going to be
working and will contribute to the economy.
As they repay the capitalized value of their
education, they pay back their debt to the
previous generation,” he says.
When it comes to funding the retirement
pensions, Boldrin says that the amount that
each individual contributes toward financing
the educational debt is capitalized at the
market rate of interest. That accumulated
capital would then be paid out, in the form
of annuities, to the same citizen once
retirement age is reached.
“Our research model suggests that public
education financing and properly redesigning
the public pension system could go a long
way toward enhancing economic efficiency and
long-run welfare,” Boldrin says
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