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Privatizing
Social Security Hurts LGBTs
Washington
— According to a new report from the National Gay and Lesbian
Task Force, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (lgbt) Americans
will be disproportionately harmed by President Bush’s plan to
privatize a portion of Social Security accounts. The plan, which has
not gotten "political traction" among Americans generally,
carves out a percentage of Social Security taxes for each person to
invest in the stock market. It relies on estimates of a better than
average return, increased deficits, and reduced benefits, the report
finds.
Selling Us Short: How Social
Security Privatization Will Affect Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender
Americans documents that lgbt Americans, on average, have lower
incomes than their heterosexual counterparts, which translates into
lower Social Security benefits when we retire. In addition, same-sex
couples are not eligible for Social Security's spousal and survivor
benefits, making the lgbt community disproportionately vulnerable to
the benefit cuts and risks inherent to the president's plan.
"There is a widespread
myth that gay people are economically advantaged compared to heterosexuals,"
said Sean Cahill, director of the Task Force's Policy Institute. "In
fact, gay and bisexual men earn anywhere from 13 percent to 32 percent
less than heterosexual men."
Selling Us Short finds
that lgbt people of color, in particular, face an income disadvantage
that leads to lower Social Security benefits. According to the 2000
U.S. Census, black and Hispanic same-sex couples earn roughly from $1,000
to $9,000 less in median annual household income than black and Hispanic
married opposite-sex couples.
"Gay people have to report
domestic partner health insurance as income to the IRS, but married
spouses don't have to report their health coverage as income,"
explained Cahill. "Not only do we earn less, we are less able to
keep what we earn."
Mandy Hu, author of the report,
added, "Even though lgbt Americans pay into the Social Security
system at the same rate as everyone else, our families and children
receive fewer benefits, often in times of crisis." Hu Cited the
Defense of Marriage Act as the source of discriminatory policies.
Amber Hollibaugh, NGLTF's
senior strategist and specialist on lgbt elders, explained that lgbt
people "are more likely to age alone and less likely to have children
than their heterosexual counterparts." This fact, along with lower
earnings, makes us more likely to be in need of Social Security.
Selling Us Short finds that lgbt
elders could be negatively affected by privatization. President Bush's
privatization plan (now called "personal accounts") was characterized
as a "gamble," by NGLTF executive director Matt Foreman. "Social
Security privatization is a gamble with the lives of lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender elders. It is a gamble our community simply cannot afford."
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