The only problem was that when Reagan took his meat axe to our tax code, he produced mind-boggling budget deficits. Voodoo economics didn't work out as planned, and even after borrowing so much money that this year we'll pay over $100 billion just in interest on the money Reagan borrowed to make the economy look good in the 1980s, Reagan couldn't come up with the revenues he needed to run the government.
Coincidentally, the actuaries at the Social Security Administration were beginning to get worried about the Baby Boomer generation, who would begin retiring in bignumbersinfiftyyearsorso.Theywerea "rabbit going through the python" bulge that would require a few trillion more dollars than Social Security could easily collect during the same 20 year or so period of their retirement. We needed, the actuaries said, to tax more heavily those very persons who would eventually retire, so instead of using current workers' money to pay for the Boomer's Social Security payments in 2020, the Boomers themselves would have pre-paid for their own retirement.
Reagan got Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Alan Greenspan together to form a commission on Social Security reform, along with a few other politicians and economists, and they recommend a near-doubling of the Social Security tax on the then-working Boomers. That tax created - for the first time in history - a giant savings account that Social Security could use to pay for the Boomers' retirement.
This was a huge change. Prior to this, Social Security had always paid for today's retirees with income from today's workers (it still is today). The Boomers were the first generation that would pay Social Security taxes both to fund current retirees and save up enough money to pay for their own retirement. And, after the Boomers were all retired and the savings account - called the "Social Security Trust Fund" - was all spent, the rabbit would have finished its journey through the python and Social Security could go back to a "pay as you go" taxing system.
Thus, within the period of a few short years, Reagan dramatically dropped the income tax on America's most wealthy by more than half, and roughly doubled the Social Security tax on people earning $30,000 or less. It was, simultaneously, the largest income tax cut in America's history (almost entirely for the very wealthy), and the most massive tax increase in the history of the nation (which entirely hit working-class people).
http://www.buzzflash.com/hartmann/05/07/har05007.html
Note: http://www.buzzflash.co...

I don't know when people (not just Americans) will learn that democracy is about electing people who actually represent their own interests and not those who want to protect their own wealth and that of their friends (putting the common person's life at risk if necessary to do so).
People who live in glass (cuntadian) houses shouldn't throw stones.
Obviously, we have our problems here in Canada, the details of which as an American you are most likely ingnorant of even though you seem to think you're qualified to comment on anyways. However, this article and the book it is about is about your country so that is why the discussion is focused on the US.
I am actually reading this book right now and it is actually appalling how incompentently the American government has been run for the past 20 years and how much successive administrations have used Social Security surpluses to cover up how bad your deficit actually is. Please read this book and then come back and comment on it.
In actual fact, your presidents with the help of congress and at the urging of Greenspan have been breaking your laws in such a way that they should be impeached or brought to trial after the fact because they are literally stealing money out of the pockets of common Americans to pay for $1.5 trillion tax cuts that clearly benefit the most wealthy ($200,000+ earners).