Committee on Economic Security (CES)

"Social Security In America"
Published by the Social Security Board -- 1937


The Social Security Act of 1935 was, arguably, the most important piece of domestic policy legislation of the 20th century. The intellectual case for the Social Security Act was developed by the President's Committee on Economic Security (CES). The CES was formed in June 1934 and was given the task of devising "recommendations concerning proposals which in its judgment will promote greater economic security." In a message to Congress two weeks earlier President Roosevelt spelled-out what he expected the CES to achieve. ". . . I am looking for a sound means which I can recommend to provide at once security against several of the great disturbing factors in life--especially those which relate to unemployment and old age."

The Committee's work was extraordinary in its scope and remarkable for its brevity. In barely six months the CES designed the first comprehensive federal social insurance program in the nation's history. Not everything contemplated by the CES at the outset made it into their final proposal and not everything in the CES proposal made it into the final law. But the Report of the CES was the basic blueprint for what would come to be the Social Security Act.

The full work of the CES was contained in 10 large volumes of reports and studies, which were never published. In 1937, two years after passage of the Social Security Act, the new Social Security Board published a summary of the Committee's work. This summary was in the form of a book entitled, "Social Security In America." This book, therefore, represents the only published work documenting the study and analysis that underlay the creation of the Social Security program. The book has been out of print since 1937, and is being republished here in its entirety.

It is important to appreciate that this book is not a full record of the CES' studies. The still unpublished 10 volumes of studies contain many reports and some key recommendations that are absent from the 1937 book. As the Preface to the book put it:

"The present report is a summary of some of the most important information in the staff studies. Completely omitted from consideration in this summary were numerous studies which concerned problems not dealt with in the Social Security Act or which have been published privately. In many instances the specific recommendations included in the voluminous staff reports have been omitted, as these are now largely only of historical interest. In this summary informational data in the staff reports have also been greatly reduced in volume, but it is believed that the most essential facts have been included."

Despite its shortcomings, this book is a foundational document in the development of the Social Security Act in 1934-35. Until the unpublished 10 volulmes become available, this electronic reprint of "Social Security in America" is the most complete documentation of the work of the CES and is perforce the most complete explication of the case for social insurance made by the CES.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Note: Page numbering and page-breaks are maintained as in the printed version of the book, in order to facilitate citations and cross-referencing to the printed volume.

  PAGES

INTRODUCTARY MATERIAL

 

 I-V

TITLE PAGE AND PREFACE
 

XIV-XIX

LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES
   

PART I- UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION

CHAPTER I  3-16 INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER II  17-54 A SUMMARY OF FOREIGN EXPERIENCE WITH UNEMPLOYMENT
CHAPTER III  55-72 ESTIMATES OF UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE UNITED STATES
CHAPTER IV  73-90 THE ACTUARIAL BASIS FOR UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION
CHAPTER V  91-104 THE ROLE OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IN UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION
CHAPTER VI 105-136 STANDARDS OF UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION: STRUCTURAL PROVISIONS
   

PART II- OLD-AGE SECURITY

CHAPTER VII 137-154 THE ECONOMIC PROBLEMS OF OLD AGE
CHAPTER VIII 155-180 PROVISIONS FOR THE AGED IN THE UNITED STATES
CHAPTER IX 181-188 OLD-AGE SECURITY ABROAD
CHAPTER X 189-216 FORMULATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS FOR AN OLD-AGE SECURITY PROGRAM FOR THE UNITED STATES
CHAPTER XI 217-228 OLD-AGE PROVISIONS OF THE FEDERAL SOCIAL SECURITY ACT
   

PART III- SECURITY FOR CHILDREN

CHAPTER XII 229-232 CHILD WELFARE IN A GENERAL PROGRAM OF ECONOMIC SECURITY
CHAPTER XIII 233-250 AID TO DEPENDENT CHILDREN
CHAPTER XIV 251-258 WELFARE SERVICES FOR CHILDREN NEEDING SPECIAL CARE
CHAPTER XV 259-286 MATERNAL AND CHILD-HEALTH SERVICES
CHAPTER XVI 287-300 A PROGRAM OF SPECIAL SECURITY MEASURES FOR CHILDREN
   

PART IV- PROVISIONS FOR THE BLIND

CHAPTER XVII 301-314 PROVISIONS FOR THE BLIND
   

PART V- THE EXTENSION OF PUBLIC-HEALTH SERVICES

CHAPTER XVIII 315-344  THE EXTENSION OF PUBLIC-HEALTH SERVICES
CHAPTER XIX 345-384 THE NEED FOR FEDERAL SUPPORT OF SOCIAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
   

APPENDIXES

APPENDIX I 385-402 PROCEDURES FOLLOWED IN ESTIMATING UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION COVERAGE IN THE UNITED STATES, 1922-33
APPENDIX II 403-414  PROCEDURES FOLLOWED IN ESTIMATING DURATION OF UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE UNITED STATES, 1922-33
APPENDIX III 415-422 PROCEDURES FOLLOWED IN ESTIMATING THE MAXIMUM DURATION OF BENEFIT
APPENDIX IV 423-439 THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE UNITED STATES EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
APPENDIX V 440 SUMMARY OF STATE UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION LAWS, JANUARY 1, 1936
APPENDIX VI 441-448 UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROVISIONS OF THE CANADIAN EMPLOYMENT AND. SOCIAL INSURANCE ACT
APPENDIX VII 449-452 OLD-AGE INSURANCE IN GREAT BRITAIN
APPENDIX VIII 453-458 THE CANADIAN PENSION SYSTEMS
APPENDIX IX 459-468 SURVIVORS' INSURANCE IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES
APPENDIX X 469-498 FINANCIAL HISTORY OF THE WORKERS' INVALIDITY, OLD AGE, AND SURVIVORS' INSURANCE OF GERMANY
APPENDIX XI 499-513 BIRTH RATE AND INFANT AND MATERNAL MORTALITY TABLES
APPENDIX XII 514 SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACT RELATING TO FEDERAL GRANTS TO STATES FOR PUBLIC-WELFARE PURP0SES
APPENDIX XIII 515-520 CREATION AND MEMBERSHIP OF THE COMMITTEE ON ECONOMIC SECURITY AND AFFILIATED GROUPS
APPENDIX XIV 521-524  STAFF OF THE COMMITTEE ON ECONOMIC SECURITY
APPENDIX XV 525-530  LIST OF STAFF REPORTS
APPENDIX XVI 531-560 THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACT
   

INDEX

INDEX 561-592 INDEX