Cut Benefits to Baby Boomers, Greenspan Warns
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Friday, Aug. 27, 2004
JACKSON, Wyo. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
said Friday that the country would face "abrupt and painful"
choices if Congress did not move quickly to trim the Social
Security and Medicare benefits that have been promised to the baby
boom generation.
Returning to a politically explosive issue that he has addressed
a number of times this year, Greenspan said that it was wrong for
the government to hold out the promise of more retirement benefits
than it is capable of providing.
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He said this issue was particularly critical given the impending
retirement of 77 million baby boomers born in the two decades after
World War II.
"As a nation, we owe it to our retirees to promise only the
benefits that can be delivered," Greenspan said in opening remarks
to a two-day conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of
Kansas City on the challenges posed by aging populations.
"If we have promised more than our economy has the ability to
deliver, as I fear we may have, we must recalibrate our public
programs so that pending retirees have time to adjust through other
channels," Greenspan said. "If we delay, the adjustments could be
abrupt and painful."
Greenspan, as he has done previously, suggested that possible
changes would be raising the retirement age to receive full Social
Security benefits, which is being gradually increased from 65
to 67.
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