Uh Oh! Congress Is ‘Fixing’ the Military Retirement System
Uh Oh! Congress Is ‘Fixing’ the Military Retirement System · The Fiscal Times

After years of “starve the beast” policies on retirement systems, some lawmakers are finally starting to come around to the idea that Americans deserve dignity at the end of their lives, and that the coming crisis with our nation’s seniors must be dealt with through stronger retirement security. Expanding Social Security benefits has the support of virtually the entire Democratic Party, and Chris Christie’s bid to force social insurance cuts back into the conversation has even drawn rebukes from other Republican leaders.

But in the name of giving Americans greater retirement security, both political parties plan to revisit exactly the same failed model that has contributed to the current crisis. And they are doing it to the one subset of society that seems to have a magic amulet around its neck when it comes to Washington: the military.

Related: 6 Popular Social Security Myths Busted

The current state of military pensions can be best described as appalling. Service members don’t specifically pay into the military pension system — the money comes from the Defense Department personnel budget. Critically, there is a sharp cliff in the existing system: Those who serve a day less than 20 years get nothing, while those with 20 years or more get a full pension for life, and can start taking it immediately, regardless of age. Due to this hurdle, only 17 percent of service members receive pensions, according to the Center for American Progress.

The onerous vesting structure invariably means that enlisted men, the ones who do the fighting, get no retirement benefits, while the top brass take pensions from that personnel budget (which could theoretically go toward higher pay for everyone). The benefits are tremendously generous. In 2007, the Bush administration passed a bill removing the cap on benefits at 75 percent of the highest base salary for the most senior officers. It’s conceivable, says the Congressional Budget Office, that officers could get more than 100 percent of their pay in retirement. Think about all the retired generals you see as television analysts, consultants for defense contractors and lobbyists. They’re also getting large pensions denied to ordinary service members.

Service members can remit a portion of their salary into the Thrift Savings Plan — a 401(k)-style government program — but they get no matching contributions from the Department of Defense, even though the Pentagon has the authority to make the contributions.

Many of the arguments about societal inequality are manifest in that military retirement system. The rank-and-file infantry typically get nothing for years of service, while the officer corps receives lavish benefits. The “corporation,” the Defense Department, has effectively no interest in helping its employees save for retirement, outside of protecting the cream of the crop.