Maine mothers and their children visited the office of Senator Collins in Portland to deliver a crucial message to Maine’s Senior Senator: No mother in this country should have to worry about having her family torn apart by our broken immigration system.
Maine People’s Action and its members are actively fighting for Comprehensive Immigration Reform. They recently held a rally on May Day, and have been successfully placing grassroots voices in front of elected officials.
Last Wednesday, the nation celebrated May Day, and for the seventh consecutive year immigrant rights and immigration reform were the focus. Immigration Reform has taken on new life as the Senate, the President and the people of this country take bold steps toward fixing a broken immigration system. Our nation cannot keep 11 million people living in fear.
Since early 2012, New Bottom Line has driven the campaign to get President Obama to dump Ed DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Today, the organization celebrated the news that the president finally made a nomination for the permanent director of FHFA. New Bottom Line also urges Congressman Mel Watt to support principal reduction at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in his new position, as well as supporting the vital role they play in ensuring homeownership and rental housing opportunities for all communities.Continue reading “New Bottom Line’s 16-Month Campaign Takes Giant Step Forward To Removing:”
The deficit crowd cheered when the President included a concept called “Chained CPI” in his 2014 Budget.
This is a proposal to change the way the Consumer Price Index (CPI) is calculated. This change is about as wonky as wonk-dome can get, but here’s a try.
Currently the CPI grows based on overall increases in the cost of goods. The new idea is to calculate how much consumers change their purchasing habits when prices rise. If there is an increase in the cost of Stella Artois, then some beer drinkers will switch to less expensive brews. Say they turn to my favorite, Tecate.
This tendency to switch choices will be calculated as a part of the new Chained CPI. So the effect of the change will be slowly to reduce the benefits paid out through programs like Social Security.
Now you may think that switching from Stella to Tecate won’t amount to much. But it keeps growing over time. The COLA for this year was 1.7 percent. If my monthly Social
Security check was $1,250 last year, it increased to $1,271.25 this year. Were the Chained CPI in effect it would be $1,267.50, amounting to $45 less a year. Again, that might not seem like a big reduction, but if the COLA is the same next year, the difference increases to $91.32 for the next year. And as the SSI checks get smaller and smaller, inflation will drive prices higher.
The cumulative effects of the change will have severe effects on the poor and the elderly. Two populations that already have few choices on how they spend their money, especially in the all-important areas of health care and pharmaceuticals.
There are also some very specific problems with the new plan, particularly for those who have no retirement support other than Social Security.
The change especially impacts women who tend to work less, earn less, and live longer.
Chaining the CPI may also amount to a subtle tax increase for the middle class, assuming that the new method will be applied to the way IRS calculates tax brackets. Over time, the brackets will rise more slowly and, as incomes gradually increase, folks will slip more quickly into higher brackets.
How the Numbers Add up, and not for the Best
The really big problem with Chained CPI, and the point of this essay is that reducing Social Security is simply a bad idea in general. The plain fact is that the growing income inequality, a severe recession and wage stagnation have created an enormous “retirement security gap.” This gap is the difference between what people should have saved for retirement and what they actually have.
The HELP Committee of the U.S. Senate estimates the retirement gap at $6.6 trillion. Half of Americans have less than $10,000 in savings. Then throw on top of this the $1 trillion in student debt. Whoa. We’re getting into real money here. How are we going to close this gap?
The Solution is the Same Program They are Attacking
Well one obvious way is to expand Social Security and Medicare so that they can help fill up the bucket. Instead, our political leaders all seem intent on making the gap worse. The bucket isn’t full enough so let’s poke a hole in the bottom. “Let’s chain down that CPI!” say these deficit hawks.
Why? When Social Security has zip to do with the deficit (and Simpleton and Blows know it)? Besides, ‘fixing’ this problem will not make the austerity preachers happy. The “Fix the Debt” corporate tax dodgers and the right-wingers simply want to dismantle the social insurance system.
And the Democrats have taken the bait. Rather than support expansion of these vital programs, many Democrats, including apparently the President, have joined the rush to austerity in a recession and are buying into a compromise with an ideology that rejects physical fact, economic science, and the idea that government can be an instrument to advance the common good.
Give me a break!
There is much to appreciate in the President’s Budget, but the Chained CPI is not one of them. Beyond opposing this bad idea, progressives should go on the offensive. Social Security and Medicare need to expand not shrink.
Small business owners across the country are weighing in on the immigration debate. Their message: small businesses support immigration reform with a roadmap to citizenship.
It seems we keep referencing Bill Daley’s recent post Has The Budget Crisis Du Jour Got You Down?. Maybe that’s because it gives you have a pretty good sense of the impending debt lid crisis that is due to hit in July, and that we need to be ready to push back against efforts to cut Medicare and Medicaid as the debate over the budget deficit heats back up.
The debate about the national economy seems to have slipped into the shadows. You may be breathing a sigh of relief. Shadows on the budget are inevitable with the Congress focusing on immigration and the press focusing on the attack in Boston.
Last week, a group of 22 Natives from all over the country came together with a willingness to learn from each other, stand in solidarity with one another, and challenge the systems of inequity that threatens the health and welfare of our elders and youth.
Community Rally Hits One Consistent Message: Get Rid of Ed Demarco
Fred and Sophia Patterson have a mortgage that was bought from Bank of America by Freddie Mac. When Mr. Patterson had his identity stolen, he lost everything, and asked for some assistance. The Pattersons accepted a temporary loan modification and continued to pay the adjusted monthly amount, Continue reading “The Housing Crisis in Pueblo, Colorado”