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Social Security for Mexicans closer to reality (Millions of immigrants to collect benefits)
www.wnd.com ^ | December 11, 2003 | WorldNetDaily

Posted on 12/11/2003 7:55:33 PM PST by VU4G10

The prospect of millions of Mexicans receiving United States Social Security checks is moving closer to reality.

The Gannett News Service reports U.S. and Mexican officials are discussing a "totalization" agreement that would transfer hundreds of millions of dollars in payments south of the border. The plan would allow documented and undocumented immigrants to return home but still collect U.S. benefits.

WorldNetDaily reported the idea to merge both countries' Social Security systems was pushed late last year by Mexican President Vincente Fox as payback from President George W. Bush for failing to secure major new immigration reforms beneficial to Mexico City.

"When the legalization talks began going nowhere, the Mexicans began focusing on this," Maria Blanco, national senior counsel for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, told the Washington Post.

Excerpts from a U.S. Social Security Administration memo dated December 2002 said the agreement "is expected to move forward at an accelerated pace."

The pact is the latest and largest attempt by Washington and Mexico City to ensure that people from one country working in another aren't taxed twice for Social Security benefits. In the first year alone, the agreement is expected to trigger 37,000 claims from Mexicans working in the U.S. legally who paid Social Security taxes but haven't been able to claim their checks, said the memo, prepared by Ted Girdner, the Social Security Administration's assistant associate commissioner for international operations.

Supporters say the proposal would improve the daily lives of Mexican citizens, many of whom are still trapped in poverty a decade after the North American Free Trade Agreement promised prosperity to the nation's 103.4 million people.

"Let's be honest, there are millions of Mexican immigrants contributing to the Social Security system and the U.S. economy," Katherine Culliton, an attorney with the Washington, D.C., office of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, told Gannett. "It's only fair they get back a benefit they deserve that will keep them from dying in poverty."

Critics, as well as some on the Bush administration economic team, worry that adding more beneficiaries would burden an already ailing system, just as American baby boomers begin to retire.

Currently, around 94,000 beneficiaries living abroad have been brought into the U.S. system under the auspices of about 20 international treaties designed to help Americans sent abroad by their employers signed since 1977. The accords are mostly with European countries, but also include Canada and South Korea.

Of the $408 billion distributed in Social Security benefits in 2001, according to Gannett, the federal government paid $173 million to about 89,000 foreigners living abroad.

Opponents contend the number of Mexican beneficiaries added to the fold would dwarf the total numbers from the 20 other countries. One estimate puts the number of Mexicans coming into the system at around 164,000 in the first five years.

Social Security Administration officials estimate about 50,000 Mexicans would collect $78 million in the first year of a U.S.-Mexican agreement. By 2050, the number is predicted to swell to 300,000 Mexicans collecting $650 million in benefits a year.

But that number doesn't include the potentially eligible, undocumented Mexican immigrants – numbering about 5 million, according to federal estimates – a recent General Accounting Office report pointed out.

Accounting for illegals, the agreement could cost U.S. taxpayers $750 million within five years of implementation.

Steven A. Camarota, director of research at the Center for Immigration Studies, says if Mexicans receive the $8,100 in benefits that Mexican-born retirees in the U.S. currently get, the total expenditure for the program will easily surpass $1 billion annually.

Beyond the cost, Republican lawmakers worry the proposal will fuel further illegal immigration.

"Talk about an incentive for illegal immigration," Gannett quotes Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, as saying. "How many more would break the law to come to this country if promised U.S. government paychecks for life?"

Any "totalization" agreement ultimately reached must be approved by Congress.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; Mexico
KEYWORDS: aliens; biggovernment; illegalaliens; legalplunder; plunder; republicanturncoats; socialism; socialsecurity; stateasfather; thenannystate; thewelfarestate; welfarestate
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To: Luis Gonzalez
You really stop acting so arrogant.

By the way, the topic line is part of the article.

101 posted on 12/14/2003 10:17:53 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Luis Gonzalez
You really need to stop acting so arrogant.

By the way, the topic line is part of the article.

102 posted on 12/14/2003 10:18:05 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Paul C. Jesup
WND
COMING TO AMERICA
Social Security for Mexicans closer to reality
U.S. discussing plan to allow millions of immigrants to collect benefits
103 posted on 12/14/2003 10:20:20 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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To: Paul C. Jesup
There's the actual headline.
104 posted on 12/14/2003 10:20:47 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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To: Luis Gonzalez
U.S. discussing plan to allow millions of immigrants to collect benefits

Note the 'millions' word is used there too.

105 posted on 12/14/2003 10:26:10 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Just like the money that I am "voluntarily" depositing into the SSA coffers is MY money, not OUR money.

Good job using the " "'s around voluntarily.

But is it "your" money what you put in?

I don't think the Government thinks so.

106 posted on 12/14/2003 10:32:21 PM PST by Syncro
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To: Paul C. Jesup
Reality check..."discussing millions" is quite different than "millions to collect".

Number two, no such thing as the US discussing millions of immigrants at all, the GAO's report maxes the beneficiaries at 650,000, but seems concerned that the total dollar figure mentioned by the government does not include the millions of illegal immigrants who may also qualify.

Hint: the reason that there's no mention of them is because A) they don't qualify to collect, and B) the Bush administration has no intention of paying SS wages to illegals living abroad.

Now, step away from the man with the free Kool Aid, and start thinking critically.
107 posted on 12/14/2003 10:57:29 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Notice the 'If' word in post 95. Of course, you seem to be skipping over a lot of parts of my posts.
108 posted on 12/14/2003 11:18:20 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Syncro
"I don't think the Government thinks so."

That's to be expected, the scary thing is that most of the people on this thread thinks that it is "our" money...collectively.

109 posted on 12/15/2003 6:44:16 AM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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To: Paul C. Jesup
"Notice the 'If' word in post 95."

Billy...

Is this you?

I thought you had a problem with "is", not "if".

110 posted on 12/15/2003 6:46:19 AM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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To: Luis Gonzalez; All
I realise I am a little late in this discussion. This article is VERY confusing. It does not state whether the SS money are going to legal documented immigrants and permanent residents OR illegal aliens with stolen SS numbers. This is probably what is feuling this discussion. My grandmother and uncle came up here worked legally, paid into the system but they went back home. Legally, they are entitled to SS benefits (but they haven't collected yet). Lots of people die who are American citizens and never collect on SS as well.
111 posted on 12/15/2003 6:53:51 AM PST by cyborg
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To: VU4G10
Any of these workers who do get SS payments will get them forever. In the US when someone dies, death certificates get filed and the payments stop. Over there? HAH Those will be the longest living people ever!
112 posted on 12/15/2003 7:00:33 AM PST by gopheraj
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To: cyborg
"This article is VERY confusing."

Consider the source.

It's yellow jopurnalism.

113 posted on 12/15/2003 7:33:51 AM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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To: cyborg
I have read other articles that mention the totalization would include provisions to allow illegals to collect SS. A good link to check out is provided in post #36, part of which follows.

The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Tennessee, Ms. Blackburn, for 5 minutes.

Mrs. BLACKBURN. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

Ms. Bovbjerg, I want to stay right with that train of thought right there. So what I am understanding from you is that illegal immigrants and their families, their survivors, their dependents could be eligible or a family of someone who worked illegally in this country could be eligible for Social Security benefits under the totalization agreement in part because it is silent on the condition of being here legally or illegally?

Ms. BOVBJERG. You are required under the law from the Welfare Reform Act of '96 to be legally present to get benefits here. How you earn those benefits is not relevant to the Social Security Administration's work. If you earned them legally or illegally and you are legally present, you will be paid those benefits. If you are not legally present, you can get them if you are a Mexican citizen in Mexico.

Mrs. BLACKBURN. In Mexico.

Ms. BOVBJERG. Yes. But your family—under current law it is difficult for your family to do that, and a provision that is in current law is waived in the totalization agreements generally.

Mrs. BLACKBURN. Okay, but what you are saying is the family could be there in Mexico, the person could have worked here, have been an illegal immigrant here and still draw those benefits?

Page 76 PREV PAGE TOP OF DOC

Ms. BOVBJERG. Under totalization.

Mrs. BLACKBURN. Under totalization. So when you consider this and consider the 5 million undocumented workers that you all estimate are here in the U.S. And you are looking at Social Security and survivor benefits and widow benefits and then these have to be included in your compilation, your cost estimate, would you please give me what you think is a top range of a cost estimate for this?

Ms. BOVBJERG. I wish I could. We looked at the actuaries' estimates because we know that they are in the best position to provide this kind of information and we felt that, given other things, we knew the estimates could be on the low end of the range. I think what we were really looking for is what might the range be and how really could we think about this apparent disconnect between the number of people assumed in the estimate and the number of people that the former INS estimated in the year 2000. I think that is the conversation and that is the kind of analysis that would be helpful in thinking about a totalization agreement with Mexico.

114 posted on 12/15/2003 8:04:11 AM PST by Klickitat
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To: cyborg
The GAO report has just as many misgivings about what this agreement is going to cost the SSA. Even in the first page of their report phrases such as "The proposed agreement will likely increase the number of UNAUTHORIZED Mexican workers eligible for Social Security benefits...."the cost of such an agreement is highly uncertain"....(responding to the estimates that there are only 50,000 beneficiaries living in Mexico today & that number is expected to increase sixfold)..."However, this proxy figure does not directly consider the estimated MILLIONS of current and former unauthorized workers and family members from Mexico and appears small in comparison with those estimates"

Even the GAO's report sheds light on the glaring ineptness of the SSA and the fedgov to implement this scheme to reward lawbreakers. What's not even considered is the billions of taxpayer $ already spent on these people who've latched themselves to our welfare system thus allowing many large and small corporations alike to have to only pay minimal wages to their foreign workers living here. This is just another sellout of the American taxpayer by GW (one term) Bush and his cronies.

115 posted on 12/15/2003 8:38:23 AM PST by american spirit (ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION = NATIONAL SUICIDE)
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To: american spirit
You might find this article interesting.

Los Amigos de Bush

116 posted on 12/15/2003 8:46:02 AM PST by DumpsterDiver
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To: Luis Gonzalez
I said in post 95, If JUST a million Mexicans were paided $500 dollars a month each (half of a what a average ammount is) it will cost US taxpayers $6,000,000,000 billion dollars a year.

I was stating a posibility, not a fact, but you are to stubborn to admit that.

117 posted on 12/15/2003 9:18:15 AM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: cyborg
Sounds like illegals. Is it still OK to use that word? This is OK though, this will get us the LaRaza vote for sure.
118 posted on 12/15/2003 9:23:04 AM PST by NeoCaveman (Ladies and gentleman, we got him.)
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Just like the money that I am "voluntarily" depositing into the SSA coffers is MY money, not OUR money.

Well if it is your money, go ask to get your money back. You will find that is ain't your money at all. At least not after the gubbermit gets their hands on it.

119 posted on 12/15/2003 9:29:29 AM PST by TLI (...........ITINERIS IMPENDEO VALHALLA..........)
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To: TLI
"Well if it is your money, go ask to get your money back."

I'll get it back the moment I retire, and regardless of where I chose to live.

By the way, just because someone stole something from you and you can't get back, it does not stop belonging to you.

120 posted on 12/15/2003 11:26:48 AM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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