AARP Hearing Center
FROM THE ARTICLE.
AARP Condemns U.S. Treasury Secretaryโs Comments on Privatizing Social Security.
And says it will fight any โback doorโ efforts to privatize the program.
By Emily Paulin, AARP.
*** There are 27 comments on the AARP Website. Stop by to add yours. ***
Published July 31, 2025.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Wednesday that theโฏโTrump accountsโ created for children in the recently passed federal tax and budget bill are a โback door for privatizing Social Security.โ AARP condemned the secretaryโs comment that same day and reinforced its strong opposition against any efforts to privatize Social Security.
โPresident Trump has said that Social Security should be protected and strengthened, and his administration needs to be clear: Any form of Social Security privatization is unacceptable,โ John Hishta, AARPโs senior vice president of campaigns, said in a statement issued on July 30.
USE LINK BELOW TO READ THE ARTICLE.
https://www.aarp.org/advocacy/privatizing-social-security.html
Letโs be honestโthis AARP headline is misleading. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent didnโt propose privatizing Social Security outright. He stated that the new โTrump Accountsโ for children could act as a back door to privatization down the lineโnot that Social Security should be dismantled. Thatโs a big difference. Taking a statement like that out of context doesnโt serve the publicโit fuels fear and shuts down real discussion.
Instead of reflexively condemning every mention of reform, AARP should be leading the conversation on how to modernize Social Security for future generations. The reality is that the program faces a serious financial shortfall within the next decade. And yet, every time a new idea is floatedโespecially something like partial privatizationโitโs immediately labeled โunacceptableโ without debate. Thatโs not protecting seniors; thatโs protecting the status quo.
Countries like Sweden have already shown how a partial privatization model can work. Their system balances guaranteed public benefits with personal investment accounts, giving individuals more control while keeping a safety net in place. Even President Bushโs plan was modest and voluntaryโdiverting just 2 percent of payroll taxes into personal accounts, without touching benefits already promised.
If we donโt at least consider these types of options, weโre just pretending the problem doesnโt exist. Raising taxes or pushing back the retirement age may seem like easy fixes, but they hit lower-income workers the hardest. Offering people a chance to grow their retirement savings through long-term market performance is not radicalโitโs responsible. Dismissing it out of hand does a disservice to the very seniors AARP claims to represent.
We need open minds, not automatic outrage.
I even ran the numbers. Had President Bushโs privatization plan been implemented in 2006, with just 3 percent of wages diverted into a personal account, someone earning $600 per week would have accumulated over $38,700 by nowโcompared to about $21,300 through traditional Social Security growth. Thatโs a difference of more than $17,000, without raising taxes or cutting benefits.
"I downloaded AARP Perks to assist in staying connected and never missing out on a discount!" -LeeshaD341679