False alarm : why the greatest threat to social security and Medicare is the campaign to "save" them

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Bibliographic Information

False alarm : why the greatest threat to social security and Medicare is the campaign to "save" them

Joseph White

(Johns Hopkins paperbacks)

Johns Hopkins University Press, c2003

  • : pbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

"A Century Foundation book"

"Health policy" -- Back cover

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

With the ageing of the US population, there is much speculation about the future of the Social Security and Medicare programmes. Will they be able to provide for the increasing number of elderly people? If they can, will their cost endanger the federal budget and the economy? Vocal segments of society are calling for radical reform of these programmes. In "False Alarm", Joseph White makes the case against radical reform, advocating instead incremental change.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction - Saving What, from What? Part I The Stakes: What Social Security and Medicare Do
  • Why Americans Trust Social Insurance and Distrust Entitlements
  • Social Security
  • Medicare's Structure, Benefits, and Financing. Part II Challenges That Are Not Crises: Why All the Fuss? The Story behind the Savings Crusade
  • Can Americans Afford to Grow Old and Grow Sick?
  • Exploiting Our Grandchildren? Part III Reforms That Would Not Be Improvements: Privatizing Security?
  • Medicare Vouchers - Not Ready for Prime Time
  • Too Young or Too Rich for Social Insurance? Part IV Responsible Reform: Moderate, Though Hardly Modest, Reforms
  • Real Responsibility.

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