Impact on Hispanic Americans
Critics of President Bush's plan to privatize Social Security cite the negative impact it will have on the most vulnerable Americans - women, widows, disabled, children, and people of color, including Hispanics and African Americans. Congresswoman Tubbs Jones and Senator Harry Reid, strong advocates of Hispanic-Americans, cite a US Census statistic that shows that for 41 percent of elderly Hispanics, Social Security is their only source of retirement income and thus any privatization will hurt them a lot.
Background articles
Social Security privatization to hurt African Americans and Hispanics
Privatizing Social Security will be hard on the Latino community
Widows, women, and children to be hurt most from privatization
Hispanics benefit from Social Security in two ways:
"We are acutely concerned about the future of Social Security. And by the year 2030, the number of Hispanic elderly will triple to 11.2% of the nation's senior population. Equally important, Hispanics will make up 17.1% of all workers in 2030, making them an ever-growing proportion of those supporting the Social Security system. It is clear that Hispanics have a profound stake in this debate," stated Janet Murguia, NCLR President and CEO.
The National Committee to Preserve Social Security & Medicare says that guaranteed Social Security benefits are especially valuable for Hispanics because, "...(Hispanics) tend to have fewer alternative resources, become disabled at higher rates, and disproportionately rely on Social Security's family benefit features." Congresswoman Loretta Sánchez, writing in Hispanic Business, agrees, "Reform of the Social Security system is imperative, but privatization is not the answer. It contains an X factor - an unknown variable - that could potentially contradict a universal rule of fiscal responsibility: You should only risk funds you can afford to lose."
Recommended article: Americans not financially prepared for retirement
Background articles
Social Security privatization to hurt African Americans and Hispanics
Privatizing Social Security will be hard on the Latino community
Widows, women, and children to be hurt most from privatization
Hispanics benefit from Social Security in two ways:
- Benefits keep pace with inflation and cannot run out no matter how long one lives
- Social Security's progressive benefit formula ensures that individuals who earned lower wages and/or had fewer years in the workforce receive larger monthly benefit amounts, in proportion to the wages they earned and the taxes they paid, than other workers do. Since Hispanic retirees on average have lower wages and fewer covered years of employment and also live longer than other workers, they receive benefit levels that return the taxes they paid in fewer years than average retirees do, while also receiving benefits for more years than the average retiree.
"We are acutely concerned about the future of Social Security. And by the year 2030, the number of Hispanic elderly will triple to 11.2% of the nation's senior population. Equally important, Hispanics will make up 17.1% of all workers in 2030, making them an ever-growing proportion of those supporting the Social Security system. It is clear that Hispanics have a profound stake in this debate," stated Janet Murguia, NCLR President and CEO.
The National Committee to Preserve Social Security & Medicare says that guaranteed Social Security benefits are especially valuable for Hispanics because, "...(Hispanics) tend to have fewer alternative resources, become disabled at higher rates, and disproportionately rely on Social Security's family benefit features." Congresswoman Loretta Sánchez, writing in Hispanic Business, agrees, "Reform of the Social Security system is imperative, but privatization is not the answer. It contains an X factor - an unknown variable - that could potentially contradict a universal rule of fiscal responsibility: You should only risk funds you can afford to lose."
Recommended article: Americans not financially prepared for retirement



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