Monday, December 18, 2023

Two in Three Young Americans Want Social Security Reform

 

Young Americans are more likely than Baby Boomers to want Social Security reformed according to a new survey by Redfield and Wilton Strategies.  According to Newsweek magazine:

A majority of 63 percent of Americans ‘strongly agreed’ (28 percent) or ‘agreed’ (35 percent) that the Social Security system needs to be reformed, according to the Redfield & Wilton Strategies/Newsweek poll. Only 10 percent ‘strongly disagreed’ (5 percent) or ‘disagreed’ (another 5 percent).”

Support for reform was strongest among Millennials:

“According to the poll, 56 percent of Gen Zers, 76 percent of millennials and 69 percent of Gen Xers believed the system should be reformed, against 50 percent of boomers.”

Newsweek interviewed Richard Johnson, Head of the Urban Institute’s program on retirement security.  Johnson offering sobering comments for young Americans: "unless policymakers fix Social Security's finances in the next 10 years, millions of retirees and people with disabilities would plunge into poverty."

That’s bad news for young Americans. 

Will the Biden Administration and the Democrats fix Social Security?  That’s easy: NO.  In fact, their plans will make things worse.

For example, Senator Elizabeth Warren wants to increase benefits for Baby Boomers by $200 a month. 

Giveaways to current beneficiaries like Senator Warren’s will make the system even more unfair to Gen Z, Millennials and Gen X.

It’s far past time to exert real pressure on the Washington political class to end the fleecing of young Americans.  Real Social Security reform would be a good place to start. 

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