From Iowa's Quad-City Times:
Fixed-income seniors can expect a tax cut
By Sen. Barack Obama | Friday, September 21, 2007
In this country, we have always believed that a lifetime of hard work
and honest living should be rewarded with a secure and dignified
retirement. But today, too many seniors are being denied that security
because they cannot afford the rising costs of everything from their
gas to their medicine. The last thing they need is a tax code that
works against them as well. That is why earlier this week, I proposed
tax relief for seniors.
My
plan will eliminate income taxes for about 7 million seniors making
less than $50,000 a year. Twenty-two million more won’t even have to
file a return, which also means they won’t have to hire an expensive
accountant.
This tax cut is needed especially because since 1993
seniors have been bearing an unfair tax burden. That year, a national
tax hike raised the amount that millions of seniors had to pay on their
Social Security benefits, which meant that their actual benefits were
reduced. My tax cut will give these seniors a break without threatening
Social Security.
But the truth is, if we’re serious about making
retirement security a reality, mitigating the effects of this tax hike
is not enough. We have to ensure that Social Security is a safety net
that today’s seniors and future generations of Americans can count on.
As
the cornerstone of America’s social compact, Social Security has lifted
millions of seniors and their families out of poverty. Without Social
Security, nearly fifty percent of seniors would live below the poverty
line. Here in Iowa, nearly 20 percent of the population – and more than
95 percent of seniors – receive Social Security. The full measure of
Social Security’s value for its recipients – as well as for those who
look after and love them – is incalculable.
But we all know the
system is not perfect. Some have argued that the problems are severe
and that Social Security is fundamentally broken. This is an
exaggeration. The underlying system is sound and the actual problem, a
projected cash shortfall over the next 75 years, is relatively small
and can be readily solved.
A return to fiscal responsibility, so
we are not borrowing billions from the Social Security trust fund,
would help strengthen the program for the long term. If any additional
steps are necessary, we should carefully weigh our options. And as
president, there are some basic principles I would honor:
First,
I will fight against efforts to privatize Social Security, as I and
others did when President Bush proposed private accounts a few years
ago. Privatization is wrong. It tears at the fabric of Social Security
— the idea of mutual responsibility — by subjecting a secure retirement
to the whims of the market.
Second, I do not want to cut
benefits or raise the retirement age. I believe there are a number of
ways we can make Social Security solvent that do not involve placing
these added burdens on our seniors. One possible option, for example,
is to raise the cap on the amount of income subject to the Social
Security tax. If we kept the payroll tax rate exactly the same but
applied it to all earnings and not just the first $97,500, we could
virtually eliminate the entire Social Security shortfall.
But
the fact is, we will not be able to solve this problem and protect
Social Security for good until we stop treating it like a political
wedge issue and instead unite Republicans and Democrats behind a
sensible solution. In 1983, there were problems with Social Security,
and President Ronald Reagan and House Speaker Tip O’Neil worked
together to forge an effective bipartisan compromise. That sense of
civility and shared purpose is notably absent in Washington today.
We
need a President who can challenge conventional thinking in Washington,
fight for the people’s interests, and bring Americans together to meet
the challenges of our time. That is exactly the sort of leadership I
intend to offer.