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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Ortiz y Pino
DATE TYPED 3-11-2005 HB
SHORT TITLE Oppose Social Security Privatization
SB SJM 75
ANALYST Taylor
Duplicates HJM 71
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Senate Joint Memorial 75 urges the New Mexico Congressional Delegation to oppose any pro-
posals by the U.S. Presidency to dismantle social security by privatizing the program. The me-
morial asserts:
•
President Bush is making the overhaul of the social security system a priority;
•
that when social security was enacted almost half of America’s senior citizens lived in
poverty, and today that number is just over 10 percent;
•
the percentage of Hispanic seniors living in poverty is 44 percent, twice that of non-
Hispanic seniors, and Hispanic seniors, particularly Hispanic women seniors, are less
likely to receive income from pensions, interest, dividends, savings or other sources, and
that more than one-half of Hispanic women depend on social security as their sole source
of income;
•
two hundred eighty thousand men, women and children in New Mexico depend on social
security benefits, and that without social security one hundred nine thousand New Mex-
ico seniors would be living in poverty;
•
approximately one in six New Mexicans, or two hundred ninety-five thousand people, re-
ceive social security benefits, either as a retiree, a disable worker, a widow or a child;
•
almost one-third of social security beneficiaries in New Mexico are under the age of
sixty-five, more than thirty thousand are widows and twenty-eight thousand are children;
•
the administration’s proposal includes no identified plan for addressing the needs of wid-
ows and children;
•
many economists question whether the social security system is in actual trouble, since
there are sufficient funds to cover social security commitments until the middle of the
century and that minor, non-privatization adjustments could protect the program beyond
that time;
•
social security is the nation’s most successful and important family protection program;
•
the basic idea behind the administration’s plan to reform social security is to let Ameri-