Elizabeth Warren: Why Seniors—Not CEOs—Deserve a Raise
http://www.commondreams.org/views/2016/03/07/why-seniors-not-ceos-deserve-raise
Any conversation about tackling poverty in the United States should include protecting and expanding Social Security. The reason is pretty straightforward: Social Security is the most powerful tool available to lift people out of poverty. Nearly two-thirds of seniors depend on Social Security for the majority of their income, and millions more children and adults depend upon survivors and disability benefits. According to Center for Budget and Policy Priorities analysis of Census data, Social Security kept 21 million Americans out of poverty in the last year alone. All told, thats more people than any other government program.
"Social Security isnt a luxury its a lifeline."Social Security works. No one runs out of benefits, and payments dont rise and fall with the stock market. Despite scare tactics from Republicans in Congress, the facts are clear. Social Security has a $2.8 trillion surplus. If we do nothing, Social Security will be safe for the next 18 years, and after that will continue to pay three-quarters of benefits through the end of the century.
Of course, we dont have to sit by and to do nothing. Since its beginning, Social Security has been adjusted from time to time, and thats what we need to do now. With some modest adjustments, it is possible to keep the system solvent for decades more, even while increasing benefits.
For the millions of Americans who rely on Social Security, the situation got worse this year. For just the third time since 1975, seniors who receive Social Securityalong with many who receive veterans benefits, Social Security disability benefits, and other monthly paymentsarent receiving any annual increase from their cost of living adjustment (COLA). CEOs at the top 350 American companies received, on average, a 3.9 percent pay increase last year. But seniors and veterans? Not a dime more.