While there are a number of proposals to address the imbalances, there really are only two possible out comes. Either the 60-70% of the baby boomer population who are highly dependent of SS are going to have the benefits cuts, or younger workers are going to have to dig into their pocket to pay for the Boomers for the next 30 years.
Bottom line; either a significant portion of seniors are going to be eating cat food, or the next few generations are going to be paying (unfairly) through the nose.
I have not written one of these critical pieces without getting a bunch of complaints from the big guns who support SS (as it is) and maintain that what I am saying is just bunk. They are wrong, I’ve been right all along.
Charles Blahous, the Public Trustee for the SS Trust Fund gave testimony (Link) to the House Ways and Means Committee on Friday. I think he laid it on the line rather nicely.
The 2011 Trustees’ report is the first in which Public Trustees have ever participated to have concluded that an era of permanent annual deficits has been reached.
This is important. It’s all you need to know. SS has turned a corner. It is headed south. It will continue to head south as far as the broader economy is concerned for the next 75 years (actually SS is in perpetual deficit).
Social Security expenditures exceeded the program’s non-interest income in 2010 for the first time since 1983. This deficit stood at $49 billion last year and is projected to be $46 billion in 2011.
These are not small numbers. The $100b shortfall in 2010-11 is a fairly big burden given that the rest of the government’s finances are in such a hole. Blahous said something that may have been a “tell” as to what we are looking at in the future with these deficits:
This deficit is expected to shrink to about $20 billion for years 2012-2014 as the economy strengthens. After 2014, cash deficits are expected to grow rapidly as the number of beneficiaries continues to grow at a substantially faster rate than the number of covered workers.
Blahous is not following the SS “script” with this comment. These are the projected deficits based on the SSTF annual report:
Note that the “projected” annual deficits remain fairly small all the way out to 2018. So what is Blahous referring to regarding big deficits post 2014? SS provides an alternate forecast that they call the “High-Cost” analysis. This chart looks at the two forecasts together.
For Blahous to suggest to Congress that the deficits will be “growing rapidly” post 2014 represents (to me) that the real thinking inside of SS is that the actual results will be closer to the worst case scenario. Should that be the result, the cumulative deficit at SS from 2011 through 2020 will be a very lumpy $900 billion.
My own review of the numbers says that we have little chance of achieving even the results of the high cost analysis. It is likely to be much worse than that. The problem is that the economy is simply not producing enough jobs. There are fewer workers contributing to the system. The SSTF is anticipating “a strengthening economy”, I see no evidence of this today and have no expectation for a turnaround in the jobs picture any time over (at least) the next five years. The following graph says it all on payrolls in America. The recession killed us. As of today the number of workers contributing to SS is less than it was in 2000. Look at this at you will understand the problem.
I think that Blahous made some important comments. One’s that will shut up the defenders of SS. The argument that those defenders repeatedly use is that SS does not impact the current deficit. That is flat out wrong:
Social Security operations are currently adding to the unified federal deficit and will add substantially more in the years to come.
The facts folks. SS is adding to the annual budget deficit ($116b in 2011). It is adding to our funding deficit (the amount we need to borrow from the Public). That number was a manageable $49b in 2010 but it will grow every year from now on. In less than a decade it will become unmanageable.
Blahous spoke about the “Assets” of the SSTF. The believers in SS constantly point to the huge $2.6T surplus at SS and say: “There is plenty of money in the piggy bank. There is no need to mess with SS today”. That is not the case at all.
If we look at the bonds from the perspective of the Trust Funds, they are assets. If we look at them from the perspective of the unified federal budget, they are a net wash, as are the interest payments that they receive.
Folks, there are no Assets in the Trust Fund. There are pieces of paper to be sure. But they are just pieces of paper. The merely represent claims on future taxpayers.
The following words are, I think, critical to the debate on SS:
The costs that will be borne by younger generations will grow significantly each year that a new cohort of baby boomers joins the benefit rolls.
I am screaming at the top of my lungs, “How can we let this happen?”
To me, it is absolutely insane to think that the Baby Boomers (I’m one) can put the burden of SS on younger workers. This simply will not work. The result of a policy approach that sticks everyone under 50 with the cost of the Boomers is going to result in deep social divides. We have enough problems in our society today. We don’t need/want Age Warfare to be added to the list. But if the plan to “fix” SS is one that sticks the bill onto young people we WILL have age warfare, it’s inevitable. The social consequences would be greater than the economic costs. Why does no one see this?
Addressing the imbalances at SS will be painful, and no one likes pain. So the result has been that our political leaders just kick this can down the road. I don’t think that there will be any fixes at SS until after 2012. While an extra two years will not result in a crisis, it will result in a higher cost of the necessary fixes. I hope all the defenders of SS read what Blahous has said on this:
Elected officials will best serve the interests of the public if financial corrections are enacted at the earliest practicable time.
Earlier action will also afford elected officials with a greater opportunity to minimize adverse impacts on vulnerable populations, including lower- income workers and those who are already substantially dependent on program benefits.
The big defenders of SS call themselves Liberals. Paul Krugman and Dean Baker are on top of the list. But there is nothing liberal about their position. Who is going to be most hurt by what is coming (absent changes)? The answer is clear. Older people who are 100% dependent on SS and younger workers who are on the bottom of the income scale.
The Liberals have to come to understand their dilemma. The more they put their foot down and demand no changes to SS, the worse off will be those that they are actually trying to help. The liberals are shooting their own constituency.
Note: On these matters I consider myself a liberal. But I come to a completely different conclusions than those who actually call themselves Liberals.
My position on this complicated issue:
-We can’t cut benefits across the board. Too many people would be eating cat food. That’s not American.
-We can’t put the burden of the Boomers on younger workers. It’s simply not fair. That’s not the American way either.
-The solution(s) have to be born (largely) by the Baby Boomers themselves. Post the Boomers, SS can be a PayGo concept. But the transition is not PayGo. It is a huge inter-generational transfer of wealth. This means that well off Boomers (there are many, including myself) are going to have to dig into their pockets to support those in their age group who did not fair so well. That, in my opinion, is the only viable solution. That would be more representative of the American way. Fairness.




You nailed this one, Bruce.
ReplyDeleteIt's baffling. It sounds like liberals have decided means-testing SS amounts to letting the camel's nose under the tent, so they'd rather stick their heads in the sand.
ReplyDeleteBruce: Once I looked into Social Security and discovered what you have been saying over the many posts, I then looked at the other programs that are set up with “Intragovernmental Holdings” like Medicare, CSRDF, ESF, and Social Security. All are set up in the same way. The set up, like opium to the addict is money to be confiscated by congress. Since the money paid in cannot just sit in a fund that is privately invested into income producing assets (because it is a government holding) it is simply noted as an asset, allocated an interest rate, and allocated to a “fund”. But there is no real fund, just a ledger column. The real monies get rolled into the Income of the US Treasury.
ReplyDeleteIt is impossible for Congress not to see these funds in the total take at the end of the budget year and not spend them on their pet project or purchase of the next vote. That is why I believe it inevitable that we will eventually end up with privatized Social Security, Medicare, and even Federal Workers retirement accounts. The years of expanding population to hide the extraction of the “extra monies” is over. We are in a contraction period and either we transfer over to individuals, taking care of themselves through private accounts and a welfare system for worst cases, or we go broke, or we end up with a real Age Warfare. The time to point to a villain is over. Those who spent the monies in the “trust accounts” and CSRDF funds when the baby boom was bringing in baskets of money are mostly out of office. Those who set up the system are mostly dead but we who are left must find a way to foot the bill and restore the system so this does not happen again.
In Alan Greenspan’s interview with CNBC http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000025564 the host is calling for making “logical” conclusions about health care- we need spend less on seniors and let them die and spend more on college age people. A logical argument but It is this very logic that shows how important it is to take this decision out of the public’s hands so we do not have to make “logical” decisions to end the lives of our elders. It simply ruins the collective morality of our country. This shows how important it is for us to get health care back into private hands. Let each individual and family wrangle with the difficult problems of how far do we go to keep ourselves/our grandparents alive. Same for Social Security. Otherwise it is going to be a constant battle between generations and there isn’t any “fair” way to make these decisions. Voting to cut Social Security to ‘cat food’ or end the life of someone else's grandma like an immoral war, will either stain and desensitize us (harden our souls) more and more or we will give in and buy bankruptcy (or runaway inflation) because we cannot pull the lever.
"the american way" is unnatural. so you need a few un-american shocks to live like the rest 6bn. ben will oblige.
ReplyDeleteThe current SS program was created by Greenspan & Reagan back in 83. Reagan changed the SS program to the current wishful thinking accounting program. The solution is to return SS back to a pay as you go program. That will mean higher taxes on the wealthy and means testing.
ReplyDeleteBeltway: wake up!
ReplyDeleteIn the end, I hope they scrap it. At base, it is a Ponzi scheme.
Good question: What is an American? I think the FDR graduated income tax and SS are socialist policies. It is saying, the state is king and we will distribute money based on what is fair. SS takes out a big chunk of money from your paycheck all your working life, and make the employer pay too. An American system, which is what I hope for, is one of charity and love. SS would not be privatized. I had a millionaire friend who died in poverty and was only kept off the streets as money was not in a 401K type fund. And most people, boomer or not, have challenges in life. Love of one another is to recognize Jesse Livermore made a bundle and died in poverty. SS would be a paygo tax not a trust fund. Not be a big socialist promise on SS letterhead of promised monthly amounts sent out to people over age 55 of a promise that cannot be delivered. SS would be at the poverty level and only be one amount because it is not based on socialist principles, but people can take care of themselves, not by Big Brother. And thus keep our nation free. Other nations do not own us because we constantly borrow their money. But we keep America free. And best of all, I would not have to be tortured by their elegant socialist promises come election time.
ReplyDeleteYou can tinker around the edges w/ means testing and increasing the age limits but in the end, the SS ponzi scheme will come crashing down. Good analysis Bruce. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteYour link to Blahous's statement is incorrect. Here's the correct link
ReplyDeletehttp://waysandmeans.house.gov/UploadedFiles/HWM_6-3-2011_statement_final_531.pdf
Dave S.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the fix. Want a job as an editor? I could use one. Nice to hear from you.
b
As a financially challenged boomer drawing SS I'm reluctantly willing to scrap SS and all the entitlement Ponzi schemes by forfeiting my benefits.
ReplyDeleteBut we must simultaneously dump the older and more egregious Federal Reserve (FED) Ponzi scheme with its fiat currency and failed Keynesian methodology. The abolition of all entitlements will only postpone the collapse of that remnant of the free market surviving in a world of central banks and fiat currencies. (No market can be free when money has no standard of value.)
The least painful solution is to enact Congressman Ronald Paul's H.R. 1098: Free Competition in Currency Act of 2011. Unfortunately, Congressman Paul doesn't even have a co-sponsor for this bill.
I'm asking my congressman Ben Quayle to co-sponsor H.R. 1098. What do you think, Bruce? Is H.R. 1098
worthy of your readers' support?
We saved 50% of our income for 20 yrs, and I'm 60 so I payed into SS since age 19, starting with delivering for a liquor store. And you want me to forfeit benefits to a hedgefund manager who only pays 15% on millions with his "carried interest scam? Forfeit it to all the Squatter assholes who lied about their income to flip houses? To the ones who used HEW to buy stocks in 2007? The comments here are assinine!
ReplyDeleteWhat about placing Social Security back into it's own Trust Fund with a lock and Key not to be used by the GAO to pay for other expenses at will. At one time S.S. had plenty of taxes in their coffers and was a successful program.{surplus yr. after yr.} So much so, that someone decided to open it's coffers to the GAO . Would placing it back in it's own lock and key trust fund help at all, with some other minor tweaks like no caps on salary contributions, raise the retirement age by 1 yr. etc.
ReplyDeleteIsn't it weird no one has mentioned that our Senators and Congressmen should 'suffer' along with the rest of us ?!!
ReplyDeleteWe paid in all of our lives ! Some/Many of us even employed others and paid again ! Now 'we' should give it up ? ! Fire the Senators who are now trying to pay SS and more medical benefits to Illigels ! Could they be getting ready to 'buy more votes' with 'our' money. Some of the above comments are really scary and that is what those in DC want. For us too be scared witless !
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