GAO Head: Changes Needed In Social Security, Medicare
Washington
The head of the Government Accountability Office last week said changes are needed in the structure of Social Security, Medicare and other government programs aimed at an aging population if the U.S. is to deal effectively with
the ballooning budget deficit.
The issue is important to the insurance industry because the Bush administration wants to package creation of personal accounts in Social Security for younger workers with a decrease in retirement benefits for them, and the insurance industry will insist during the upcoming negotiations that its products be part of the mix of offerings to be made available under private accounts.
But Jack Dolan, a spokesman for the American Council of Life Insurers, said the issue of private accounts under Social Security is different than another Bush administration idea likely to surface in 2005, creation of Lifetime Savings Accounts. LSAs are separate because they are in reality "hot savings accounts" that allow individuals to tap their tax-free savings at any time for any purpose.
"They are a bad idea," Dolan said. "People need to be encouraged to save for the long term, especially when you consider the potential changes in Social Security, coupled with Americans increasing longevity."