My Fellow Americans, the State of Our Union Is . . . Interminable
Morning Jolt January 29, 2014 My Fellow Americans, the State of Our Union Is . . . Interminable Okay, let's get this out of the way. The only part of the president's State of the Union address that you need to read:
Cory Remsburg is a Dagwood sandwich of courage, determination, inspiration, and all-around bad-assery. The rest of the speech was interminable, meandering, shifting in tone, unfocused, and at least twice as long as it needed to be. In a development that surprises no one, his fans liked it, his critics largely hated it, and millions upon millions of Americans wondered what happened to their favorite shows that usually air at 9 p.m. Eastern. The Three Accounts Plan for a Real American Recovery We're stuck with this guy until January 2017. We don't know exactly what the future holds, but the outlook on the horizon isn't good. The economy sputtering along, unemployment still high by historical standards, low workforce participation rate, a complicated mess in health care, annual deficits that are merely ludicrously high instead of incredibly ludicrously high, chaos overseas, hoping our numb-skull big campaign-donor ambassadors manage to avoid exacerbating a crisis . . . Imagine somebody comes along and says, "Okay, America. We've tried that approach and we've seen what it gets us. Let's try a different approach. Let's try an approach that sets you up for the future with three accounts." Those three accounts are a 401(k) or IRA, a 529 plan for education, and a health savings account. Each of those accounts operates on the same basic concept: You put money in, sometimes your employer kicks some money in, and the government gives both of you some big tax incentives. Unlike a bank savings account paying one tenth of one percent to one percent (annual percentage yield), money put in these accounts gets invested in a fund that you choose and most years increases in value by several percentage points. These funds can go down in value, but most years will go up in value, and some years will go up a lot, depending on how the market and broader economy perform and the judgment of the folks managing the fund. The 401(k) or individual retirement account: These types of accounts accumulate retirement savings; 401(k)s are set up by employers; IRAs are, as their name suggests, set up by individuals. The 529: This is an education-savings plan operated by a state or educational institution designed to help families set aside funds for future college costs. Your contributions are not deductible when you make them, but your investment grows tax-deferred, and when you withdraw to pay for the college costs, you pay no federal tax on that. Plan assets are professionally managed either by the state treasurer's office or by an outside investment company hired as the program manager.
Many successful, secure Americans have these accounts. If everyone in America had these three accounts, their worries about paying for their retirement, paying for their children's education, and paying for their health care would be greatly ameliorated. Not completely erased, but everyone in America would have one, two, or three little nest eggs, each enjoying the fruits of compounding returns. As time goes by, your accounts would grow and your worries would shrink. We could either mandate these accounts for every American . . . (sound of conservatives drawing swords from sheaths) . . . or we could make it unbelievably easy to set up these accounts. (My aim, of course, is to turn every American into an investor, from birth to death.) You've just had a child? Congratulations, mom and dad, here's the setup form for your 529 plan with your child's new Social Security card. Plug a bit in every year over eighteen years, and you'll have a nice pile of money to put towards college, trade school, etc. If anything, we should expand it so that your 529 never goes away, and you can put money in at any time to use on a graduate degree, certification programs, or any other instructional course. You've just turned 18? Congratulations. As you pick up your driver's license, here's the setup form for your IRA and Health Savings Account. Instead of fining people one percent of their income for not having health insurance — up to 2 percent in 2015 and 2.5 percent in 2016, let's make it easy to put one percent of your pre-tax paycheck into any or all of these accounts. Let's let Americans pay one less percentage point of their current 6.2 percent Social Security tax into their IRA or 401(k). Let's let Americans pay a half a percentage point of their current 1.45 percent Medicare tax payment into their health savings account! (Sound of Democrats drawing swords from sheaths) You know who once supported one piece of this proposal? Hillary Clinton, back in 2007, who wanted a universal 401(k). One wrinkle was that she had the federal government matching the first $1,000 in savings for married couples who earn up to $60,000 a year and would match the first $500 for married couples who earn $60,000 to $100,000 a year. These matching donations from Uncle Sam would cost $20 billion to $25 billion per year. Not her worst idea ever, but I'd prefer to give an employer a tax incentive or give the individual an expanded tax deduction --deduct 105 percent of your annual contribution? 110 percent? — than have the U.S. Treasury match your contribution. Last night, Obama took a baby step in the right direction with this idea:
As I understand it, the MyRA would have no minimum deposit or balance, and is designed to help low-income earners sock away enough money until they can get a regular IRA. A 'Three Accounts' approach to Americans' economic security would be big, it would be bold, and it would tap into Americans' distrust of Washington, now reaching Deepwater-Horizon-level depths. We can tweak the details, but the idea is to give all Americans the tools to build their own prosperity and restore their confidence that tomorrow will be better than today. ADDENDUM: How I'll spend part of my afternoon: To read more, visit www.nationalreview.com
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