http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000103&sid=a1zy6ESRd0w4&refer=us . . . excerpt
Plans being championed by Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina and by House Republicans including Representatives Sam Johnson of Texas would fund the individual accounts by tapping the excess payroll taxes currently paid by workers, which the Social Security Administration estimates will be $86.7 billion next year.
That surplus is now spent on other government programs; diverting it to private accounts would add to the overall federal budget deficit, said Robert Bixby, executive director of the Concord Coalition in Washington, a group that advocates a balanced budget. And after peaking in 2008, the surplus begins to dwindle.
``Then what happens?'' asked Bixby, who supports adding private accounts to Social Security separate from payroll taxes. ``It's kind of like watching a mission to Mars without any plan to land when you get there.''
President George W. Bush has been trying since January to build support for his personal-accounts proposal and to generate congressional interest in addressing the future funding shortfall in Social Security, which the system's trustees forecast will run through its surplus by 2041. While House Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Texas and other Republicans are lining up to support the idea of using the excess payroll taxes for private accounts, Democrats are giving no signs of interest, indicating the logjam on Social Security in Congress remains in place.
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