Albany Times Union

When will U.S. workers get paid leave? 2035 — maybe

- By Kathryn Edwards ▶ Economist Kathryn Edwards wrote this for Bloomberg News.

Most wealthy countries provide workers with paid time off when they become parents, fall ill or need to care for loved ones. It’s one of the great no-brainers of public policy: It benefits newborns, families and the entire economy.

The U.S. is a glaring exception. It could reap enormous gains by creating a national paid family leave program. Sadly, its best chance to do so probably won’t come until 2035.

Commonly associated with maternity, paid leave does much more: It allows anyone with an acute health issue — either their own or a family member’s — to take the time they need without losing income or their job. Mothers who have it are healthier, work more and earn more. Their families are less likely to experience food insecurity or poverty. Businesses report improved productivi­ty, performanc­e, turnover and morale.

The best solution would be a federal program administer­ed along with Social Security. Workers, employers or both would contribute payroll taxes to a trust fund, and workers taking leave would receive benefits based on past earnings. Administra­tive costs would be very low, and universal coverage would spread protection and risk across the largest possible pool of workers.

Problem is, Social Security is facing its own crisis. Its trust fund, the surplus saved up to cover the retirement of the baby boom generation, is set to run out in 2035. After that, benefits will have to be paid out of current income, entailing an estimated uniform cut of 20 percent for more than 70 million recipients — and probably triggering an immediate recession, along with skyrocketi­ng elderly poverty.

Averting that horrible outcome will be a politicall­y fraught task, requiring Congress to agree on a combinatio­n of tax increases and benefit reforms to ensure Social Security’s longer-term viability. Legislator­s probably won’t touch the program until they absolutely must, which means that any significan­t change — including paid family leave — will have to wait until 2035.

The longer Congress kicks the can on Social Security, the longer a program that could immensely benefit millions of Americans will get kicked along with it.

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