DE and X:
I think I see what is missing from the equation. I've used terms you're not familiar with regarding an arena, and the regulations governing it, you aren't familiar with. Let me explain.
1) New money is new investment money. It's not money made on the investment.
2) Old money is the money invested by prior investors.
3) Strict accounting practices are required (by the SEC) to keep investors' money compartmentalized. If I paid "old" investors with money put in by "new" investors (or any investor other than the originator), I'd at a minimum, be stripped of my licenses by the SEC, fined and possibly jailed.
4) SS does not pay according to what is "invested" by the investor, the retiree, they pay with new money paid by taxpayers.
Here is an example: If you invest in a mutual fund, your money doesn't just add to a big pile of every investors' money, your money goes into an strictly defined account. If you remove funds from the mutual fund, someone doesn't just reach into the big pile of money and take some out, that money must be removed from the account that has been set up as yours, and no one else's.
Diamondeye wrote:
Then any and all investments are Ponzi schemes. Money to pay the investor has to come from somewhere.
No, see above.
Diamondeye wrote:
Again, if it were simply a question of "new money", all investment would be a Ponzi scheme. A Ponzi scheme implies that an ever-increasing supply of new money is needed to fuel an ever-increasing supply of money investors because no other meaningful source of income to the scheme exists. Aside from the fact that the interest on Treasuries precludes this, the important difference is that the ratio of investors to those receiving payments is entirely a product of national demographics and lifespan changes - not fraudulent behavior on anyone's part.
See above, in addition, the rules regarding "fraudulent investment" have noting to do with how much, or how little money is actually invested. If you're paying off investors with new investors money, that's fraud. If you're paying off retirees with taxpayer money...
Diamondeye wrote:
So? Any poorly-thought-out polciy is automatically a Ponzi scheme now? It's interesting to see you make no distiction between ineptitude and malice.
Nope, just an investment scheme that pays off old investors with new investors' money, as I've stated repeatedly, is a Ponzi Scheme.
Diamondeye wrote:
Since I'm not making a fiat declaration at all, that's a relatively pointless reply. The entire assertion that it's a Ponzi scheme is a fiat declaration and based entirely on ignoring the difference between a scheme set up to be a pyramid on purpose and one that ends up appearing similar only because of population demographics.
Stating what something is, or isn't, without evidence is a fiat declaration. The entire assertion that it is a Ponzi Scheme is based on SS fitting the definition of a Ponzi Scheme, to a "T".
Xequecal wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
X:
Please provide some evidence of this "trust fund". Please at least make an effort to show what treasuries are in the "trust fund", and what their value is. Please stop making fiat declarations as if they are absolute proof.
Please explain how my logic leads to you stating, "ANY investment operation that pays out more than it takes in, for whatever reason, automatically qualifies as a Ponzi scheme." I've been very clear as to what defines a Ponzi Scheme - here's a hint: I posted the definition above.
No, under my logic a Ponzi Scheme is a Ponzi Scheme.
If an investment operation is paying out more than they take in, then they must be paying off old money with new money. Where else is the money going to come from?
See above. It comes from
investment income, not
new investor income.
Xequecal wrote:
As for evidence of the trust fund,
this qualifies. Note that it's listed as "assets" and not claiming they have actual dollars available.
No, that doesn't qualify, that's just more evidence that it's a Ponzi Scheme, paying off retirees, not with their "investment", but with new taxpayer money.
Examples:
Quote:
The $49 billion deficit last year (excluding interest income) and $46 billion projected deficit in 2011 are in large part due to the weakened economy and to downward income adjustments that correct for excess payroll tax revenue credited to the trust funds in earlier years.
Quote:
After 2014, cash deficits are expected to grow rapidly as the number of beneficiaries continues to grow at a substantially faster rate than the number of covered workers.
Quote:
After 2022, trust fund assets will be redeemed in amounts that exceed interest earnings until trust fund reserves are exhausted in 2036, one year earlier than was projected last year. Thereafter, tax income would be sufficient to pay only about three-quarters of scheduled benefits through 2085.
Those statements are clear evidence that the "trust fund" doesn't exist. Unless you call a balance of
-$49,000,000,000 a "trust fund". Further, it is clear that SS uses taxpayer money (new investors) to pay retirees' (old investors') disbursals.
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