----- Original Message -----
From: "Institute for Public Accuracy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2001 10:38 AM
Subject: Perspectives on Bush's Social Security Commission


Institute for Public Accuracy
915 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045
(202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___________________________________________________

         Wednesday, July 25, 2001

         Interviews Available:
         Perspectives on Bush's Social Security Commission

ROGER HICKEY, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.ourfuture.org
Co-director of the Institute for America's Future, Hickey said: "The
interim draft report released Tuesday by President Bush's Social Security
Commission confirms what we originally said about this commission when it
was created: These people...are driven by ideology, not truth. Their report
shamelessly distorts the facts in an attempt to frighten the American
public into supporting their pre-ordained goal: to privatize and thus
undermine the Social Security system.... Bush and his party want to cut
Social Security's guaranteed benefits.in order to create millions of
private stock market accounts that will benefit Wall Street and hurt most
who live and work on Main Street.... Commission member Robert Johnson, who
chastised his fellow Democrats for attacking the report, himself has
regulatory business before the Bush administration with his various
business ventures.... Other members of the commission include officials
from Fidelity Investments, AOL Time Warner, the World Bank, the Cato
Institute, the Hoover Institute and the American Enterprise Institute."

RICHARD B. DU BOFF, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.njfac.org/us21.htm
Author of the paper "Social Security Is Not In 'Crisis'" and professor of
economics at Bryn Mawr College, Du Boff said today: "The Commission
distinguishes itself by having distilled the myths around Social
Security.... Those who predict higher long-term returns on stocks as a
reason for privatization must address the fact that the return on stock
markets is linked with GDP growth. If the real GDP growth is as slow as the
projections, can anyone believe that the stock market will not be adversely
affected? If the stock market is rising at a healthy pace then Social
Security will also have the funds it needs to keep solvent and there is no
case for privatization, especially since Social Security has a lean and
mean overhead cost of only 1 percent whereas similar private sector
endeavors such as the life insurance industry have exorbitant overhead
rates averaging 12 to 14 percent of the benefits."

DIANA ZUCKERMAN, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.center4policy.org
President of the National Center for Policy Research for Women & Families,
Zuckerman said today: "Social Security is the most important poverty
program in this country and it has kept millions of adults and families out
of poverty. Women have benefited most of all, because Social Security
provides a safety net for women who never had paid jobs or stayed home to
raise children. Privatizing the system and cutting benefits would hurt most
women. Our government needs to keep the promises of the current Social
Security system, not make new promises we can't keep. Let's not forget --
the key word is security."

MARK WEISBROT, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.cepr.net
Co-author of "Social Security: The Phony Crisis" and co-director of the
Center for Economic and Policy Research, Weisbrot said today: "The
'President's Commission to Strengthen Social Security' is anything but
that. The standard projections, which are used by the Commission, assume
the slowest economic growth in the nation's history. Yet they still show
that all promised benefits will be paid for the next 37 years without any
changes at all, and that the program will always be able to pay a larger
benefit than current retirees receive. In order to argue that Social
Security is 'broken,' the Commission wants to pretend that the $1.1
trillion of U.S. government bonds held by the Social Security trust fund
are not worth anything. Try telling that to Salomon Brothers, Bill Gates,
or any billionaire or pension fund holding U.S. Treasury bonds."

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; David Zupan, (541) 484-9167








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