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Totalization Agreement With Mexico Draws Criticism
By Mike Minton
Talon News
January 16, 2004
The Social Security Totalization agreement that was part of President
Bush's "temporary worker" proposal last week has stirred up
a hornet's nest among some law-makers, and flies in the face of the
General Accounting Office's September, 2003 report, according to Rep.
Tom Tancredo (R-CO).
In a press statement, Tancredo said, "The American public needs
to understand how this plan might impact an already fragile Social Security
System."
According to Tancredo, the GAO claims "the reliability and integrity
of Mexican government data on birth, work history and retirement contributions
are open to question because of poor internal controls within the Mexican
government."
Dan Stein, Executive Director of the Federation for American Immigration
Reform, (FAIR), claims that with the proposed plan, an illegal alien
who "violated our employment laws, worked fewer than the required
number of years [for eligibility], and then returned to Mexico could
collect full U.S. Social Security benefits." He adds that this
would be done as America's children are told the system may be bankrupt
by the time they retire. It would also nullify a 1996 Congressional
law barring illegal immigrants from collecting Social Security.
Proponents of totalization say that legal and illegal Mexican workers
pay millions, and possibly billions of dollars in payroll taxes, and
that it's "only fair" they be allowed to reap the benefits
of having paid into the system.
Jo Anne Barnhart, Commissioner of the Social Security Administration,
said the SSA has talked with Mexico for the past couple of years about
a totalization plan, and that she has sent officials to Mexico to learn
about Mexico's Social Security system. Ms. Barnhart claims that the
officials said Mexico was prepared to handle a totalization agreement.
Totalization agreements were begun to help employees sent abroad to
still have enough credits to draw Social Security benefits with the
contributions paid in total in the countries in which the employee worked.
Most such agreements -- the United States has 20 -- are with European
countries
However, an agreement with Mexico would be exponentially more costly
than the agreements with the other 20 countries combined, critics say.
Rep. John Hostettler (R-IN), Chairman of the House Judiciary Subcommittee
on Immigration, Border Security and Claims, says the other countries
with which America has totalization agreements do not have public policy
encouraging illegal immigration to the United States.
Another worry of lawmakers is the concern that the millions of undocumented
Mexicans in America today would be eligible for benefits. Barnhart says
current law prohibits illegals from claiming benefits, and that law
would not change with a totalization agreement with Mexico.
According to azcentral.com, the Inspector General's report says that
the SSA "doesn't consider the work-authorization status of the
individual when they earned the wages. It only considers whether the
individual can prove he or she paid Federal Insurance Contribution Act
(FICA) taxes as part of this work."
According to the GAO report, Mexican citizens would only have to work
6 quarters in the United States, which could then be combined with time
worked in Mexico. As long as the total time worked adds up to 40 quarters,
that person would qualify for the Social Security program.
"Adding Mexico to the list of countries with which we have reciprocal
social security agreements makes no sense unless the primary goal is
to encourage more illegal workers to enter the U.S. workforce,"
Tancredo said. "All who care about the fiscal health of the Social
Security System will have serious objections to this plan."
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