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Obama, Romney offer different paths on Medicare, Social Security

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SOCIAL SECURITY

Obama:

Said last week that Social Security was “structurally sound” but needed to be “tweaked.”

Obama has not proposed any changes in Social Security. But he has said he’s open to raising taxes by taxing some amount of income above $110,100, the annual level at which Social Security taxes now stop.

Romney:

Would increase Social Security’s eligibility age by one month per year beginning in 2022 and index future program eligibility to life expectancy. He also wants to slow the rate of benefit growth for high-income recipients.

While Social Security has received scant attention during the campaign, Medicare has emerged as a dominant issue.

A September poll by Kaiser found that Obama leads Romney by 20 points — 52 percent to 32 percent — on the question of who “do you trust to do a better job determining the future of the Medicare program.” Among those age 65 and over, Romney closes the gap but still trails Obama 44 percent to 42 percent.

On the question of who’s more trustworthy “to reduce Medicare spending wisely,” Obama leads Romney 54 percent to 40 percent. But among seniors, 38 percent feel Medicare will be “worse off” under Obamacare compared to 31 percent who say it will be “better off.”

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