"welfare system"?? who are they kidding? it's an insurance system.

On 10/23/06, Jayson Funke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
US welfare system faces accounting overhaul
By Krishna Guha in Washington
Published: October 22 2006
Financial Times

A radical new approach to government accounting that would require the US 
administration to account for the cost of future social security payments year 
by year as people build up entitlements will be proposed on Monday.
The proposal by the federal accounting standards advisory board (FASAB) – which 
would also require the government to account for benefits accrued under 
Medicare and other social insurance programmes in the same way – is 
unprecedented internationally. It would radically change the presentation of US 
government finances, in effect bringing forward the cost of rapidly increasing 
social security and Medicare obligations and greatly increasing the reported 
fiscal deficit.

George W. Bush's administration is firmly opposed to the proposal, which 
officials believe wrongly implies that the government is contractually obliged 
to make future payments based on current benefit rules.
They fear this would make it more difficult to reform the big entitlement 
programmes and increase pressure on future governments to raise taxes to meet 
projected funding shortfalls.

The big increase in the reported fiscal deficit under the proposed rule could 
have an immediate political effect, making it more difficult to press for Bush 
tax cuts scheduled to expire in 2010 to be made permanent.
The result is a split in the FASAB board, with six independent members 
supporting the proposal and the three representing the Treasury, the White 
House office of management and budget, and the government accountability office 
opposing.

The FT has obtained a copy of the FASAB preliminary views paper which will be released on 
Monday. In it, the independent board majority argues that "for social insurance 
programmes an expense is incurred and a liability arises when participants substantially 
meet eligibility requirements during their working lives".

By contrast, the government representatives argue that the liability arises only when the 
benefit amount is "due and payable" as under current accounting rules. The 
majority independent directors want the government to start providing for the future cost 
of social security and other benefits when workers become fully insured after 10 years in 
covered employment.
They say the current arrangement is "flawed" because it "fails . . . to recognise 
the accruing cost of social insurance programmes in each reporting period".

Adopting the proposed new rule would bring the government more into line with 
the private sector, an approach that has considerable support within a section 
of the Republican party and may in this instance be of interest to Democrats 
too.However, it would break with international public accounting practice, 
which essentially treats social insurance offered by sovereign governments as a 
political commitment to pay future benefits rather than a financial liability.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has written to the FASAB 
saying it is "very concerned" about the proposed rule change.
The letter, signed by Barry Anderson, head of the OECD's budgeting and public 
expenditures division, says that "classifying these transactions the same as private 
sector liabilities is wrong" and could confuse the public.
The proposal will now be put to public consultation, with hearings scheduled 
for March. If the board votes to adopt it, the administration could still veto 
the proposal, but this would be unprecedented.

"We have never been prevented from adopting an accounting standard," a person 
familiar with the process said.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2006

--------------------------------

Jayson Funke

Graduate School of Geography
Clark University
950 Main Street
Worcester, MA 01610




--
Jim Devine / " Why should we hear about body bags, and deaths...I
mean, it's not relevant. So why should I waste my beautiful mind on
something like that?" – Barbara Bush

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