1948 Advisory Council Report--
Introductory Material
80TH CONGRESS 2nd Session
SENATE Document NO. 208
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR SOCIAL
SECURITY LEGISLATION
THE REPORTS OF THE ADVISORY COUNCIL
ON SOCIAL SECURITY
TO THE SENATE COMMITTEE ON FINANCE
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
83404
WASHINGTON 1949
[Submitted by Mr. MILLIKIN]
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES,
June 19 (legislative day, June 15),1948.
Ordered, That reports of the Advisory Council
on Social Security to the Committee on Finance, when submitted to the
Secretary of the Senate subsequent to the proposed adjournment of the
Senate, be printed as Senate documents with illustrations, and that
thereafter a compilation of the various reports by such Advisory Council,
with other relevant materials on the subject, be printed as a Senate
document with illustrations.
Attest:
CARL A. LOEFFLER, Secretary.
CONTENTS
List of charts and tables
Letter of transmittal
Senate Resolutions 141 (80th Cong., 1st sess., July 23, 1947) and 202
(80th Cong., 2d sees., February 20, 1948)
Foreword
Membership of the Advisory Council
PART I. OLD-AGE AND SURVIVORS INSURANCE
Introduction and summary:
The method of social insurance
Summary of recommendations
Technical and minor amendments
Interdependence of recommendations
Plan of the report
Goal of universal coverage
Limitations of voluntary methods
More liberal eligibility requirements for older workers
More adequate benefits now
Test of retirement
Financing
Contribution rate
Government participation
Purchasing power of benefits
Importance of a broad informational program
Recommendations on coverage:
1. Self-employment
2. Farm workers
3. Household workers
4. Employees of nonprofit institutions
5. Federal civilian employees
6. Railroad employees
7. Members of the armed forces
8. Employees of State and local governments
9. A study of social-security protection for the possessions of the
United States
10. Inclusion of tips in the definition of wages
Recommendations on eligibility:
11. Insured status
Recommendations on benefits:
12. Maximum base for contributions and benefits
13. Average monthly wage
14. Benefit formula
15. Increased survivor benefits
16. Dependents of insured women
17. Maximum benefits
18. Minimum benefits
19. Retirement test
20. Qualifying age for women
21. Lump-sum benefits
Recommendations on financing:
22. Contribution schedule and Government participation
Appendixes--Old-age and survivors insurance:
I-A. The old-age and survivors insurance trust fund
I-B. Actuarial cost estimates for old-age and survivors insurance recommendations
I-C. Number of aged persons receiving benefits under old-age and survivors
insurance and number receiving old-age assistance per l,000 persons
aged 65 years and over, by State June 1948
I-D. Family benefits under present program, December 1947
I-E. Memorandum by two members dissenting from the majority report with
respect to mandatory coverage of the traditionally tax-exempt institutions
I-F. Resume of minority opinions on changes in benefit and contribution
base
I-G. Staff for old-age and survivors insurance
PART II. PERMANENT AND TOTAL DISABILITY INSURANCE
Introduction and summary
Summary of major recommendations
The method of social insurance
Recommendations:
1. Eligibility requirements
2. Definition of permanent and total disability
3. Amount of benefits
4. Disqualifications
5. Adjustment to workmen's compensation
6. Adjustment to other Federal disability programs
7. Integration with old-age and survivors insurance
8. Effective date
9. Rehabilitation services
Administration of permanent and total disability insurance
Appendixes--Permanent and total disability insurance:
II-A. Actuarial cost estimates for permanent and total disability
II-B. Memorandum of dissent by two members
II-C. Staff for permanent and total disability insurance
PART III. PUBLIC ASSISTANCE
Introduction and summary
Public assistance and social insurance
The nature of the program
Major defects in the system of Federal grants-in-aid for public assistance
Summary of recommendations
The cost of the Council's recommendations
Financing the public-assistance programs
Federal, State, and local responsibility
Recommendations:
1. Increased payments for aid to dependent children
2. Federal grants for general assistance
3. Medical care for recipients
4. Care of the aged in medical institutions
5. Residence requirements
6. Study of child health and welfare services
Appendixes--Public assistance:
III-A. Statistics related to public assistance
III-B. Memorandum of dissent by four members from the majority report
with respect to Federal participation in general assistance
III-C. Staff for public assistance
PART IV. UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
Introduction and summary
Characteristics of State-Federal unemployment insurance
Deficiencies in the present program
Recommendations for improvement of the program
Plan of the report
Goal of universal coverage
Benefit financing designed to encourage the adoption of adequate benefit
provisions
Developing a more rational relationship between contribution rates and
cyclical movements of business
Setting the minimum contribution rate
Promoting greater employee and citizen participation
Promoting improved administration
Disqualifications
Study of supplementary plans
Temporary disability insurance
Importance of a broad informational program
Recommendations on coverage:
1. Employees of small firms
2. Employees of nonprofit organizations
3. Federal civilian employees
4. Members of the armed forces
5. Borderline agricultural workers
6. Inclusion of tips in the definition of wages
Recommendations on benefit financing:
7. Contributory principle
8. Maximum wage base
9. Minimum contribution rate
10. Loan fund
11. Standards on experience rating
Recommendations on administration:
12. Combining wage credits earned in more than one State and processing
interstate claims
13. Financing administrative costs
14. Clarification of Federal interest in the proper payment of claims
Recommendation on disqualifications:
15. Standards for disqualifications
Recommendation on plans supplementary to unemployment
insurance:
16. Study of supplementary plans
Temporary disability insurance
Appendixes--Unemployment insurance:
IV-A. Cost estimates
IV-B. Payments on erroneous and fraudulent claims
IV-C. Memorandum by five members dissenting from the majority report
with respect to continuation of unemployment insurance and the employment
service on a State basis--Concurring dissent by Mr. Rieve in support
of a national system of unemployment insurance and in opposition to
the recommendations of the majority of the Council with respect to continuation
of unemployment insurance on a State basis
IV-D. Provisions of temporary disability insurance laws and data concerning
their operation
IV-E. Statistics related to unemployment insurance
IV-F. Staff for unemployment insurance
CHARTS AND TABLES
PART I. OLD-AGE AND SURVIVORS INSURANCE
Charts:
A. Estimated cost of expanded program recommended by Advisory Council,
in terms of percentage of pay roll
B. Number of aged persons receiving benefits under old-age and survivors
insurance and number receiving old-age assistance per 1,000 persons
aged 65 years and over, by State, June 1948
Tables:
1. Primary insurance benefit and its ratio (percent) to specified average
monthly wages under the Advisory Council's proposals and under the present
law
2. Illustrative old-age benefits under present formula and that proposed
by Advisory Council
3. Maximum amounts of benefits payable under the present law and under
Advisory Council's proposal, at various levels of average monthly wage,
to survivor families consisting of a widow and one or more child beneficiaries
4. Estimated annual cost of expanded program recommended by Advisory
Council, for specified years, by major changes in terms of percentage
of pay roll
5. Estimated annual cost of expanded program recommended by Advisory
Council, for specified years, by major changes (in millions of dollars)
6. Estimated annual cost of expanded program recommended by Advisory
Council, for specified years, by type of benefit, in terms of percentage
of pay roll
7. Estimated annual cost of expanded program recommended by Advisory
Council, for specified years, by type of benefit (in millions of dollars)
8. Estimated taxable pay rolls under present coverage and under expanded
coverage (in billions of dollars)
9. Estimated percentage of persons attaining age 65 in various future
years who will be fully insured, if high employment conditions prevail
10. Estimated percentage of persons aged 65 and over in the population
of various future years who will be fully insured,
if high employment conditions prevail
11. Estimates relating to size of trust fund under expanded program
recommended by Advisory Council (in millions of dollars)
12. Estimated beneficiaries and disbursements in 1948 under expanded
program recommended by Advisory Council, if the plan had been in effect
for a century, under two assumptions
13. Percentage distribution of beneficiary families by monthly amount
of family benefits in current-payment status at end of 1947, for each
specified family group in receipt of benefits
PART II. PERMANENT AND TOTAL DISABILITY INSURANCE
Tables
1. Disability insurance benefit and its ratio (percent) to specified
average monthly wages under the Advisory Council's proposals
2. Estimated permanent and total disability beneficiaries and benefit
disbursements under Advisory Council proposal
PART III. PUBLIC ASSISTANCE
Charts:
A. Old-age assistance and aid to dependent children: Average monthly
payment per recipient from Federal, and State and local funds, calendar
year 1947
B. General assistance: Distribution of expenditures for assistance by
source of funds, fiscal year 1946-47
1. Number of aged persons receiving benefits under old-age and survivors
insurance and number receiving old-age assistance per 1,000 persons
aged 65 years and over, by State, June 1948
2. Public assistance: Average monthly payment, December 1947
3. Public assistance: Recipient rates in continental United States,
December 1947
Tables:
A. Comparison of average payments under old-age assistance and for retired
workers under old-age and survivors insurance
1. Estimated percentage of persons aged 65 and over in the population
of various future years who will be fully insured under old-age and
survivors insurance if high employment conditions prevail
2. Special types of public assistance and general assistance: Expenditures
for assistance to recipients, by program and source of funds, calendar
year ended December 31, 1947
3. Old-age assistance: Expenditures for assistance to recipients, by
source of funds and State, calendar year ended December 31,1947
4. Aid to the blind: Expenditures for assistance to recipients, by source
of funds and State, calendar year ended December 31,1947
5. Aid to dependent children: Expenditures for assistance to recipients,
by source of funds and State, calendar year ended December
31, 1947
6. General assistance: Expenditures for assistance to cases, by source
of funds and State, calendar year ended December 31, 1947
7. Old-age assistance: Distribution of payments to recipients, October
1947
8. Aid to the blind: Distribution of payments to recipients, October
1947
9. Aid to dependent children: Distribution of payments to families,
October 1947
10. Old-age assistance: Expenditures for assistance payments and administration,
fiscal years 1936-47
11. Aid to the blind: Expenditures for assistance payments and administration
for State-Federal programs, fiscal years 1936-47
12. Aid to dependent children: Expenditures for assistance payments
and administration for State-Federal programs, fiscal years 1936-47
13. General assistance: Expenditures for assistance payments and administration,
fiscal years 1936-47
14. General assistance: Percentage of assistance payments met from State
funds, fiscal year ended June 30, 1947
15. Statutory residence provisions for public-assistance programs under
Social Security Act, February 1948
16. Federal grants for public assistance per capita, by State, 1946-47
PART IV--UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
Tables:
A. Average monthly covered employment, 1938-48
B. Total labor force by coverage status in an average week of year ended
June 30, 1948
C. Estimated average annual benefit costs and State unemployment reserves
as a percent of taxable wages at the end of a 10-year cycle with a uniform
contribution rate of 1.2 percent and a $40 maximum benefit formula
D. Estimated State unemployment contribution rates in high-cost States
necessary to maintain reserves of 3 or 5 percent of taxable wages at
the end of a 10-year cycle using a $40 maximum benefit formula and assuming
2 to 5 million unemployed
E. Estimated State unemployment contribution rates in high-cost States
necessary to maintain reserves of 3 or 5 percent of taxable wages at
the end of a 10-year cycle using a $40 maximum benefit formula and assuming
2 to 10 million unemployed
F. Estimated average annual benefit costs and State unemployment reserves
as a percent of taxable wages at the end of a 10-year cycle with a uniform
contribution rate of 1.2 percent and a $25 maximum benefit formula
G. Estimated State unemployment contribution rates in high-cost States
necessary to maintain reserves of 3 or 5 percent of taxable wages at
the end of a 10-year cycle using a $25 maximum benefit formula and assuming
2 to 5 million unemployed
H. Estimated State unemployment contribution rates in high-cost States
necessary to maintain reserves of 3 or 5 percent of taxable wages at
the end of a 10-year cycle using a $25 maximum benefit formula and assuming
2 to 10 million unemployed
I. Comparison of temporary-disability-insurance laws administered in
connection with unemployment-insurance laws
J. Operations of three temporary-disability-insurance programs during
fiscal year July 1, 1947-June 30, 1948
Tables:
1. National summary of data on unemployment insurance
operations, by years, 1938-47
2. Size of firms covered by State laws, Dee. 31, 1948
3. Wage and employment qualifications for benefits under State laws,
Dec. 31, 1948
4. Waiting-period requirements under State laws, Dee. 31, 1948
5. Weekly benefits for total unemployment under State laws, Dec. 31,1948
6. Selected data relating to the weekly benefit amount, by State 1938-41,
1944-47
7. Duration of benefits in a benefit year under State laws, Dec. 31,1948
8. Selected data relating to the duration of unemployment benefits,
by State
9. Summary of disqualification provisions for three major causes State
laws, Dee. 31, 1948
10. Average employer contribution rate, by State, 1941-48
11. Cumulative receipts, benefits paid, and funds available for benefits
by State, as of Sept. 30 1948
12. Ratio of benefits to taxable u ayes, by State, 1938-41, 1945-47
13. Funds available for benefits at end of year as percent of taxable
wages, by State, 1939 41, 1945-47
LETTER
OF TRANSMITTAL
DECEMBER 31, 1948.
Hon. EUGENE D. MILLIKIN,
Chairman, Committee on Finance,
United States Senate, Washington 25, D. C.
DEAR SENATOR MILLIKIN: There is transmitted herewith a compilation
of the four reports of the Advisory Council on Social Security
to the Senate Committee on Finance containing recommendations
for changes in social security legislation. Each of these reports
has previously been issued as a separate document: (1) Old-Age
and Survivors Insurance (S. Doc. 149), (2) Permanent and Total
Disability Insurance (S. Doc. 162), (3) Public Assistance (S.
Doc. 204), and (4) Unemployment Insurance (S. Doc. 206).
The Council has studied the social security programs and their
implications carefully and has endeavored to take full account
of the interests both present and future--of all segments of
the Nation. It is the hope of the Council that these reports
will be of value to the Congress in bringing about necessary
and desirable changes in the social security programs.
I wish again to express my deep appreciation of the earnest
and fine-spirited efforts of all members of the Council and
particularly of the splendid work done by the Associate Chairman,
Dr. Sumner H. Slichter. The work of the Council has been greatly
facilitated by an efficient and cooperative staff working under
the able direction of Robert M. Ball.
Respectfully submitted.
EDWARD R. STETTINIUS, Jr.,
Chairman, Advisory Council on Social Security.
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SENATE RESOLUTION 141
(80th Cong., 1st sess., July 23, 1947)
Resolved, That the Committee on Finance, or any
duly constituted subcommittee thereof, is authorized and directed to
make a full and complete investigation of old-age and survivors insurance
and all other aspects of the existing social security program, particularly
in respect to coverage, benefits, and taxes related thereto, for the
purpose of assisting the Senate in dealing with legislation relating
to social security hereafter originating in the House of Representatives
under the requirement of the Constitution.
SEC. 2. For the purpose of this resolution, the Committee
on Finance, or any duly constituted subcommittee thereof, is authorized
to sit and act at such places and times during the sessions, recesses,
and adjourned periods of the Eightieth Congress, to require by subpoena
or otherwise the attendance of such witnesses and the production of
such books, papers, and documents, to administer such oaths to take
such testimony, to procure such printing and binding, and to make such
expenditures as it deems advisable.
SEC. 3. The committee is authorized to designate and appoint
an Advisory Council to study, assist, consult with, and advise the Committee
on Finance or its duly authorized subcommittee, and the committee is
further authorized to designate and appoint such other officers, experts,
or assistants as it deems necessary for the performance of the investigation
directed by this resolution.
SEC. 4. The compensation of persons assisting the committee
in the investigation directed by this resolution shall be fixed by the
committee at such amounts or rates as the committee deems appropriate,
but such amounts or rates shall not exceed the amounts or rates payable
for comparable duties prescribed by the Classification Act of 1923,
as amended.
SEC. 5. The committee, or its duly constituted subcommittee,
is authorized, with the approval of the Committee on Rules and Administration,
to request the use of the services, information, facilities, and personnel
of the departments and agencies in the executive branch of the Government
in the performance of its duties under this resolution.
SEC. 6. The expenses of the committee under this resolution,
which shall not exceed $25,000, shall be paid out of the contingent
fund of the Senate upon vouchers signed by the chairman.
SENATE RESOLUTION 202
(80th Cong., 2d sess., February 20, 1948)
Resolved, That the limit of expenditures authorized
under Senate Resolution 141, Eightieth Congress, agreed to July 23,
1947 (authorizing an investigation by the Committee on Finance of old-age
and survivors insurance and other aspects of the social security program),
is hereby increased by $25,000.
FOREWORD
The Advisory Council on Social Security was appointed
by the Committee on Finance of the United States Senate under authority
of Senate Resolution 141. Members of the Council, citizens from various
walks of life and representing different parts of the country, were
appointed on September 17, 1947. Preliminary meetings to plan the work
of the Council were held in October and November and, at the first meeting
of the full Council held in Washington on December 4-5, 1947, an interim
committee was designated to make a continuing study of the problems
before the Council and to develop proposals to be considered by the
Council as a whole. The full Council has held a total of seven 2-day
meetings and the interim committee has had eight 1-day
meetings.
The Council's four reports appear in this compilation
in the order that they were prepared and transmitted to the Senate Committee
on Finance. Part I covers old-age and survivors insurance; part II recommends
the establishment of a permanent and total disability insurance program;
part III relates to public assistance and maternal and child health
and welfare services; and part IV relates to unemployment insurance
and temporary disability insurance.
PART I. OLD-AGE AND SURVIVORS
INSURANCE
In some areas the present provisions of the old-age and
survivors insurance program fail to provide basic security. The weaknesses
of the existing program have been taken into consideration, and recommendations
are made for ways to close the gaps in the protection now offered. Account
has been taken also of changes that have occurred in our economy since
1939, when the general structure of the present program was adopted.
Particular attention has been given to the problem of financing the
program. The recommendations regarding the contribution rates recognize
the need for a rate which is high enough to establish a reasonable relationship
between contributions and benefits and which will increase gradually
to the full amount necessary to support the future program, but not
so large as to build up excessive amounts in the trust fund in the early
years.
The recommendations on old-age and survivors insurance
are designed to provide a program that will meet the present needs of
the people without imposing too heavy a burden on the taxpayers of the
future. The Council anticipates that still further revisions in the
program will be needed as future events affect family life, the labor
force, and the general conditions under which people live.
PART II. PERMANENT AND TOTAL
DISABILITY INSURANCE
The recommendations on disability insurance are designed
to provide benefits for permanently and totally disabled workers through
the extension of the present system of old-age and survivors insurance
to cover the risk of disability. The Advisory Council has found that
one of the few major areas in which the Nation lacks social-insurance
protection is the area of need and dependency arising out of permanent
and total disability. The possibility of total income loss and eventual
exhaustion of all personal resources because of such disability is of
grave concern to every individual, his family, and the community.
Two members of the Council oppose the inclusion of the
risk of total and permanent disability under social insurance but favor
providing disability protection through the addition of a new category
to the present State-Federal assistance program. (See appendix II-B.)
PART III. PUBLIC ASSISTANCE
This section of the compilation includes recommendations
for modifying the existing State-Federal programs--old-age assistance,
aid to dependent children, and aid to the blind--and for the establishment
of a State-Federal general assistance program for needy persons not
currently covered by any State-Federal public assistance program. No
recommendations are made for changes in the provisions of title V of
the Social Security Act relating to maternal and child health, services
for crippled children, and child welfare services; the Council recommends,
however, that a special commission be appointed to study and report
on these programs.
The recommendations on public assistance are limited to
the changes in the Federal law that the Council considers necessary
to help the States correct the weaknesses in their programs. The Council
does not propose basic changes in the present State-Federal division
of responsibility under which the administration of the program is entirely
in the hands of the States and Territories, subject to certain minimum
Federal standards relating to the definition of need and other conditions
of eligibility and to certain aspects of administration. Beyond these
minimum standards, the States have wide discretion in determining who
is eligible for assistance and in administering the programs.
The Council has not made a detailed study of the policies
and administrative practices of the various States and Territories but
rather, accepting the desirability of considerable State discretion
in determining standards and policies, has confined itself to a consideration
of the Federal role. The wide differences among the States in the proportion
of population receiving public assistance and in the amount of their
payments indicate not only great differences in the need to be met but
differences in the definition of need and in the administration of the
programs. The Congress may wish to inform itself further concerning
the effects of Federal grants-in-aid upon the policy decisions and administrative
practices of the States. The Council, in studying the Federal part of
the program, has found indications of a number of inadequacies and of
several opportunities to improve and strengthen the Federal role in
this State-Federal program.
In making its recommendations, the Council has been guided
by the conviction that social security should be provided insofar as
possible through insurance rather than through assistance. Its recommendations
with respect to public assistance, therefore, presuppose that the essential
recommendations contained in parts I, II, and IV,of this compilation
on old-age and survivors insurance, permanent and total disability insurance,
and unemployment insurance will be enacted into law.
PART IV. UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
The recommendations in this section of the compilation
are designed to improve the existing State-Federal system of unemployment
insurance by (1) extension of coverage, (2) removing some of the present
barriers to more adequate benefit provisions and providing for adequate
benefit financing, (3) making more rational the relationship of the
rate of contribution to the cyclical movements of business, (4) improving
the methods and financial basis of administration, and (5) increasing
employee and citizen participation in the program.
Five members of the Council favor the establishment of
a single national system of unemployment insurance (see appendix IV-C).
It should be noted, however, that four of these members would join with
the majority in supporting the recommendations in this report for the
improvement of the State-Federal system should the Congress decide against
the establishment of a national program.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The Council was greatly facilitated in its work by the
generous assistance given by many public and private agencies and interested
individuals. Information received from Members of Congress and in letters
from the general public was particularly helpful.
Organizations and individuals most familiar with each
specific area of the Council's investigation furnished technical service
and advice. Among those giving such aid were the Social Security Administration
and its Bureaus of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, Employment Security,
Public Assistance, and Children's Bureau; the Treasury Department; the
American Public Welfare Association; the Interstate Conference of Employment
Security Agencies; the Council of State Governments; the American Association
for the Blind and the National Federation of the Blind; representatives
of commercial insurance companies; the Russell Sage Foundation; and
a number of State and local public welfare and unemployment insurance
administrators. The Council and its staff would have been greatly hampered
in its work had it not been for the valuable assistance rendered by
these groups and individuals.
MEMBERSHIP OF THE ADVISORY
COUNCIL
Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., rector, University of Virginia,
chairman.
Sumner H. Slichter, Lamont University professor, Harvard University,
associate chairman.
Frank Bane, executive director, Council of State Governments.
J. Douglas Brown, dean of the faculty, Princeton University.
Malcolm Bryan, vice chairman of board, Trust Co. of Georgia.
Nelson H. Cruikshank, director of social-insurance activities, American
Federation of Labor.
Mary H. Donlon, chairman, New York State Workmen's Compensation Board.
Adrien J. Falk, president, S. & W. Fine Foods, Inc.
Marion B. Folsom, treasurer, Eastman Kodak Co.
M. Albert Linton, president, Provident Mutual Life Insurance Co.
John Miller, assistant director, National Planning Association.
William I. Myers, dean, New York State College of Agriculture.
Emil Rieve, president, Textile Workers' Union and vice president, Congress
of Industrial Organizations.
Florence R. Sabin, scientist.
S. Abbot Smith, president, Thomas Strahan Co.
Delos Walker, vice president, R. H. Macy & Co.
Ernest C. Young, dean of the graduate school, Purdue University.
STAFF DIRECTOR
Robert M. Ball, assistant director of the Committee on Education and
Social Security, American Council on Education.