To understand the itch behind the Republican
Party's attempt to replace the Social Security Administration
with an investment-based system, it is necessary to recognize
that the single most powerful voice advocating the creation
of "personal" accounts has not been George W. Bush
channeling Barry Goldwater, or the PR battalions of the securities
industry (though these are, of course, considerable forces in
their own right), but rather a mild-mannered professor of economics
at Harvard University named Martin Feldstein.
The notion that the Bush administration has
only disdain for technical expertise in economics is a nettlesome
myth. If anything, George W. Bush listens to economists too
much.
The current enthusiasm for an overhaul of the
system of social insurance that the United States adopted during
the Great Depression has been building slowly in some precincts
of the economic profession for more than thirty years - at least
since Feldstein published in the Journal of Political Economy
in 1974 his first study of the effects of the Social Security
system on savings behavior.
That does not mean such expert opinion is anywhere
near unanimous (it is not). Or that the division of opinion
exists mainly along generational lines (closer, but still not
really true). Or that the new thinking is likely to carry the
day against the weight of 70 years' experience any time soon.
It is, however, expert opinion. The impetus to the Bush administration's proposals has arisen in recent
years more from university departments than from any other quarter
of opinion-manufacture in America.
Twice in the space of the past ten years, Feldstein
has used a turn in the profession's most bully pulpits to advocate
that the current insurance system -- in which retirement costs
are handled in much the same way that the armed forces are financed,
on a pay-as-you-go basis -- be traded for a fully funded system,
in which individual "contributions" would be invested
through great funds in stocks and bonds.
First in 1996, in a lecture to the annual
meeting of the American Economic Association (just one economist
is invited to address
the entire membership; the outgoing president gives the only
other plenary lecture), Feldstein described Social Security
reform as "the missing piece" in policy analysis.
In that year Steve Forbes was the only presidential candidate
calling for privatization. Four years later George W. Bush actively
campaigned on the proposal.
"The very adverse impact of the current
system on a wide variety of groups, including two-earner couples,
the young, and the poor, may embolden some politicians to go
beyond patching up the solvency of the current system to propose
more fundamental reforms than have been considered in the past."
Then, earlier this month, in a presidential
address to the same association, Feldstein recommended a combination
of forced individual accounts and government insurance for all
the major forms of social insurance - not just personal retirement
accounts, but medical savings accounts and unemployment insurance
as well. If ever there was an intellectual blueprint for the
"ownership society," this was it. Its outlines have
been worked out by many hands over many years.
It is unmistakably clear by now that George
W. Bush is, as was Harry Truman, an accidental president - a
man with very little of the informal training for the job that
is the by-product of a focused ambition. As the Truman example
shows, such a lack of preparation is not necessarily a bad thing.
Looking at Bush, one sees an opportunist, a
gambler, an improvisation artist who is, nevertheless, a firmly
principled man. His considerable skills won him the Republican
nomination and they got him into the White House when the election
turned out to be a tie. It will take years to distinguish his
successes from his failures while in office.
There is, however, absolutely nothing accidental
about Marty Feldstein.
It is difficult to exaggerate the political
centrality of Feldstein to his professional generation - the
generation of the 1960s. In many respects, he is Milton
Friedman's heir. But unlike Friedman, who gained influence with
a rugged simplicity communicated to the public through books,
magazine columns and a television series, Feldstein has instead
built his reputation among his fellow economists with imaginative
and careful empirical work. He has equally carefully built behind-the-scenes
relationships with politicians as well.
Feldstein began his public policy career as
a leading proponent of the rhetorically powerful capital gains
tax cuts of 1978, which produced an avalanche of high-tech investment.
It came as no surprise, then, when he was the man to whom the
Reagan administration turned for legitimacy in 1982 when tax
cuts got it in trouble. With him to the Council of Economic
advisers he took a handful of post-docs who since have become
household names, at least among families that follow political
economy: New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, Harvard University
President Lawrence Summers, best-selling textbook author (and
former Council chairman himself) N. Gregory Mankiw. In the process,
Feldstein became a regular adviser to then-Vice President George
H.W. Bush.
Returning to Harvard in 1984, he took over
teaching economics to a generation of college freshmen. He resumed
the presidency of the non-partisan National Bureau of Economic
Research as well, sculpting a style both of research and the
funding of research that is now imitated around the world. But
Feldstein's specialty, as before he went to Washington, was
training the next generation of public finance economists. Among
the better known are Summers, who rose to prominence during
the Clinton administration; Laurence Kotlikoff of Boston University
and Alan Auerbach of the University of California at Berkeley,
co-developers of a powerful framework of intergenerational accounts;
Harvard's David Cutler, designer of an elaborate system of national
health accounts; Columbia's Glenn Hubbard, chairman of the Council
of Economic Advisers under George W. Bush; and MIT's James Poterba,
the lone economist to be appointed by Bush to his new Tax Reform
Commission. And now Feldstein himself is among the leading candidates
to replace Alan Greenspan.
Probably the only economist of comparable influence
among of the previous generation, the World War II generation,
is Robert Solow, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
He, too, has operated mainly behind the scenes, but with astonishing
affect: setting much of the nation's previous economic policy
agenda, impressing a style of work on the profession, and training
a generation of students who further shaped the public's concerns.
They include William Nordhaus of Yale, George Akerlof of the
University of California at Berkeley, Peter Diamond of MIT,
Joseph Stiglitz of Columbia, Martin Baily of the Brookings
Institution, Robert Gordon of Northwestern University, Robert
Hall of Stanford and Olivier Blanchard of MIT. But
where Solow's tradition exemplified nearly everything we meant
by "liberal" in those years, Feldstein today represents
the essence of what today we think of as being "neoconservative."
In influence, the men are similar; in core beliefs, they are
each other's opposites.
Feldstein was born in 1939 in New York and
raised on suburban Long Island. As an undergraduate at Harvard
College, he expected to become a physician. But a fellowship
year at Oxford turned his interest to the intricacies of medical
insurance, and he stayed on to become a lecturer in public finance.
At the 90th birthday party in 2002
for Milton Friedman at the University of Chicago, Feldstein
recalled the copy of Friedman's book, Capitalism and Freedom,
which he had bought in England in 1964. "I was then
a very impressionable 24-year-old and the book had a major influence
on me - probably more than I realized at the time."
He recalled Friedman's brief but vigorous argument
in that book on strictly libertarian grounds against the Social
Security program - that it was bad simply because it infringed
on individual freedom. He recalled as well his own surprise
as a young economist that Friedman had failed to mention the
effect that a generous retirement insurance program might have
on individual savings - and his own resolve to extend Friedman's
consumption function apparatus and empirical style to analyze
what he soon dubbed "social security wealth" - the
present value of future benefits - as a determinant of household
savings.
That was the beginning of Feldstein's long
reconnaissance. The concept of social security wealth
is at the heart of today's debates. Friedman's philosophical
arguments - so reminiscent of Barry Goldwater's - have become
in Feldstein's hands arguments about economic efficiency, couched
in terms of "deadweight loss" and potential welfare
gains. (The old joke has it that deadweight loss is what happens
when a bus otherwise full of economists goes over a cliff --
with two empty seats.)
The study of the various undesirable effects
on incentives that inevitably arise has been extended to the
other big social insurance programs against various kinds of
risk -unemployment, healthcare and disability. No one doubts
any longer that there are behavioral responses to taxes and
benefits. Computers have made it possible to administer benefit
plans that in the 1930s, when old age and disability insurance
finally came to the United States, would have been unthinkable.
Feldstein has made his point - one point, anyway.
By the 1990s, even leading Democrats had begun to chime in on
the virtue of adding a thin layer of personal investment accounts
on top of the existing system, N.Y. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
and University of Michigan Edward "Ned" Gramlich (who
chaired a Social Security panel ten years ago) among them. And
President Bill Clinton himself tentatively embraced the idea
of investing some social security taxes in the stock market,
instead of parking them in government bonds. But no Democrat
has expressed any willingness to alter the most salient underlying
characteristic of the current system, which is the income transfer
from the well-to-do to the poor implicit in its guarantee to
provide all retirees with a certain reasonable level of benefits
regardless of how little they have saved or how long they live.
Why the hurry today? The kinds of deep changes
that Feldstein advocates ordinarily require decades to win popular
acceptance. The Bushies are rushing because they know that,
far from being the wave of the future, this is their last hurrah.
The senior members of today's administration got their first
taste of real power in 1974, when they became part of the Ford
administration, after the resignation of Richard Nixon. Out
of office for four years while Jimmy Carter held the White House,
they returned to positions of authority for twelve years, until
Bill Clinton sent them packing again - until George W. Bush
raised them to their current heights Thirty five years at or
near the pinnacle of power is a long time.
But by 2008, the old lions will have left the
stage: both Bushes, Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Federal Reserve chairman Greenspan.
Feldstein will remain. But he will have to find new candidates
to advise. And, unless they are Democrats (as, conceivably,
they might be), the chances are they won't be living in the
White House any time soon. The Republican Party is deeply divided
and unlikely to find a candidate around whom its various factions
can unite.
Marty Feldstein is not Paul Wolfowitz, the
reckless architect of the war against Saddam Hussein. But George
W. Bush is still the president. The haste with which Bush is
trying to stampede his party to a vote with a phony Social Security
"crisis" is strongly reminiscent of his ill-considered
campaign in Iraq. The administration's "Hail Mary"
tactics, if they are implemented, are as likely to backfire
just as badly in the domestic arena as in its ill-conceived
occupation of Iraq.
That doesn't mean that thoughtful Democrats
can afford to ignore Feldstein's important ideas about what
can be done to improve social insurance. They are more durable
than the Bush administration. Many of them will stand the test
of time. Indeed, probably it will be the Democrats who ultimately
put them into practice.