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speaker biographies
Speaker
WILLIAM SHIPMAN
Subjects
retirement finance
Video Clip
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Thirteen years ago Bill Shipman invited 25 people to Boston to discuss an issue
most participants had rarely considered, Social Security. The participants were
responsible for the retirement plans of the largest corporations and state
pension funds in America. The four-hour session was led by the Commissioner of
Social Security who served under Presidents Reagan and Bush (41).
The next year, 1994, the Commissioner asked Shipman to testify to Congress and
offer his views on Social Security. In October Shipman testified that the
Social Security system, however compassionate in intent, was fundamentally
flawed in design and financially unsustainable. He suggested that the country
consider reforming the system from a tax-based to a market-based structure
wherein individuals save and invest for their retirement needs.
Shipman’s comments were observed by the Cato Institute, one of Washington’s
prominent think tanks. The following year Cato requested that he write a paper
to be published by Cato and asked him to be the co-chairman of Cato’s Project on
Social Security Choice.
In 1996 Shipman co-authored “Promises to Keep: Saving Social Security’s Dream”
which was modeled after his 1994 testimony. The importance of “Promises” is
that it was written by two people from the financial services industry, the
industry that would play a pivotal role in Social Security’s fundamental reform.
Within a couple of years there was another meeting, much smaller, just a handful
people. They discussed reforming Social Security along the lines of a defined
contribution plan with personal property rights. This was an important
gathering because one of the participants moved on and became the President of
the United States.
When then Governor Bush campaigned for the presidency he promoted Social
Security reform. This was unusual. Most politicians avoided the subject for
the political risks were considered too high. Bush saw it differently. He
promised that if elected, he would appoint a commission to provide answers for
reform, and he did.
In the mid-term elections of 2002, all candidates for both the Senate and House
who ran on Social Security reform won. This outcome was some evidence that from
a political point of view Social Security reform was no longer a losing issue.
During the 2004 campaign President Bush again ran on Social Security reform as
did more candidates for Congress. All prevailed except for one Senate
candidate.
In his State of the Union Address in January, 2005 President Bush devoted about
twenty percent of his speech to Social Security. Providing this amount of time
for a single domestic policy issue was unusual, perhaps unprecedented. He then
went on the road to sell his idea.
In his 2006 State of the Union Address the president devoted only eight
sentences to Social Security, two of them suggesting a new commission to study
Social Security’s future. The political oxygen so necessary for reform went
elsewhere.
The lessons learned over these thirteen years are numerous: political, economic,
financial and cultural. Social Security is the largest government program in
the world, affects all Americans, and under today’s law will not be able to
provide promised retirement benefits. If not reformed, it may cripple our
economy. We are not alone. About 130 countries have systems much like ours and
all of them face the same challenges. This is a global problem and one that is
unprecedented. But there is a solution, which if adopted, will provide
opportunities as unprecedented as the problem itself.
William G. Shipman is chairman of CarriageOaks Partners LLC a
Massachusetts-based consulting firm specializing in retirement finance. An
advocate of Social Security reform in the United States, Mr. Shipman has
testified before the House Ways and Means Sub-Committee on Social Security and
co-authored Promises to Keep: Saving Social Security’s Dream. He is
Co-Chairman of the Cato Project on Social Security Choice, and was on the
National Advisory Board of “Americans Discuss Social Security,” a non-profit
organization funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts to generate informed debate on
the issue. He also served as a delegate to the White House Conference on Social
Security. His research has been published by the Financial Analysts Journal,
The Journal of Investing, the National Center for Policy Analysis, The
Heritage Foundation and the Cato Institute, as well as numerous other
publications, and was named one of its outstanding papers by The Journal of
Investing.
Mr. Shipman has discussed and debated public policy issues before the United
Nations and both the Joint Economic Committee and House Budget Committee Task
Force on Social Security of the United States Congress, as well as the
Australian Parliament. He has given well over 300 speeches across six
continents and twenty-one countries and has consulted on retirement finance
reform with government officials from Australia, China, Poland, the United
States and Russia as well as the European Commission. He was invited by the
government of the Russian Federation to be a member of its Supervisory Council
for the Institute for Social Insurance Development. And the Ministry of Labour
and Social Security of the People’s Republic of China invited him to be a
visiting professor at the Ministry’s Social Insurance Institute. The government
of China has also published Promises to Keep in Chinese.
Prior to establishing CarriageOaks, Mr. Shipman spent more than 30 years in
institutional financial research, consulting and investment management. He was
a principal of State Street Global Advisors, a founding partner of H. C.
Wainwright Co., Economics, and a general partner of H.C. Wainwright & Co. He
serves on the Board of Directors of The Institute for Research on the Economics
of Taxation, Washington, DC. Mr. Shipman received his degree in psychology from
Syracuse University.
Articles
Making Social
Security a Money Machine
Fact and Comment by
Steve Forbe
OVERHAULING SOCIAL Security
MUCH OF THE WORK IS DONE
(.pdf)
by William G. Shipman - Investor's Business Daily
TWO GLOBAL FORCES ON A
COLLISION COURSE
by William G. Shipman
OLD EUROPE
by William G. Shipman
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Windsor, Connecticut 06095
Voice: 860-687-1116
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