The land down under could rescue America’s retirement system. President Donald Trump teased that his administration is crafting an Australian-inspired model that could complement Social Security. If any government program needed an overhaul, or at least a competitive alternative, it is the Depression-era entitlement.
Trumponomics Does Australia
Does Social Security require a facelift? The system’s trust fund is running out of cash, benefits are poised for a 20% cut in the next decade, and the worker-to-retiree ratio is at an unsustainable 2.8 (it was 42 in 1940). It ultimately depends on the current workforce to cover the tab for today’s retirees. Suffice it to say, change is necessary if Washington aims to keep the show running for decades to come.
Enter: Crocodile Dundee.
Canberra maintains a $4.4 trillion three-pillar retirement model: mandatory employer contributions (superannuation), a safety-net floor (the age pension begins at 67), and voluntary savings (stocks, investment property, term deposits, and the family home).
Australia’s retirement system has a personal lockbox for retirees, similar to what former Vice President Al Gore proposed in 2000. Aussie workers own the accounts, and the money is actively invested instead of just dumping the 12.4% payroll tax into a general fund and distributed to beneficiaries.
Australians appear to be enamored with the program as well. While many Americans might loathe the idea of being forced to contribute to a dying system with every paycheck, voluntary member contributions in Australia have increased by almost 20% this year compared to 2025. So, perhaps for the first time in human history, a government is doing something the public likes by tapping into global financial markets.
“They have a plan in Australia, which people really like. It’s really worked out very well,” Trump told reporters on July 6. “We’re going to be talking about that with Congress and see if we can implement it.”
Forget Aussienomics?
So, emulating the Australian model should be a no-brainer, correct? Not exactly. Even proposing a complementary system has a chorus of critics pushing back, urging the president to concentrate on the pay-as-you-go program.
In a recent interview with MarketWatch, Max Richtman, president and chief executive officer of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, said:
“Instead of toying around with federally seeded private retirement accounts loosely inspired by Australia’s public pension system, we would advise President Trump to focus on Social Security — a program that has worked splendidly for more than 90 years to provide Americans with basic retirement security.
“Social Security can continue to play that role, but only if the president and Congress have the will to shore up the program’s trust fund and avert a large automatic benefit cut in the early 2030s.”
But many of the reforms proposed over the years – means testing, raising the full retirement age beyond 67, or changing cost-of-living adjustments – have been condemned. In 2012, vice-presidential candidate Paul Ryan was depicted in a campaign ad throwing an elderly woman in a wheelchair off a cliff. Democrats claimed that Ryan had been trying to dismantle Medicare.
President Trump, perhaps learning from past elections, has personally stated that neither he nor the Republican Party will touch Social Security. Of course, not doing anything is the most dangerous idea of them all, especially for the millions of seniors who depend on it for survival and the incoming Generation Xers who are relying on it to keep the lights on.
To be fair, there have been some bipartisan efforts to address the program’s shortcomings in recent years. The most recent is the PROMISE Act, a bill aimed at restoring its solvency. Like other government initiatives, this will not amount to a hill of beans in the long run.
Doomerism
Following the annual Social Security trustees’ report projecting that the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) trust fund may be depleted in the fourth quarter of 2032, a group of economists warned that delaying reform could heighten risks to the bond market and the broader economy. George Mason University’s Mercatus Center published a June 26 paper stating that delaying reform would eventually force politicians to turn to capital markets, straining an already oversupplied capital market.
“We view the impending depletion of the Social Security OASI trust fund in the early 2030s as the inflection point that could lead to a fiscal crisis if legislative action is not taken beforehand,” the economists wrote.
In the end, given America’s fiscal condition — from nearly $1 trillion a year in interest costs to the fact that mandatory programs now consume roughly 70% of federal spending — Washington will struggle to afford much of anything without taking a chainsaw to an $8 trillion budget.
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