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Security trust fund
exhausted 4 years sooner than last year's forecast
By Jeanne Sahadi
May 12, 2009
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The recession has taken its toll on
Social Security. The officials who oversee the program forecast
May 12 that the Social Security trust fund will be exhausted by
2037 -- four years earlier than estimated last year.
The trust fund reflects a $2.4 trillion surplus paid into Social
Security over 20 years that Uncle Sam has borrowed, spent and promised
to pay back. Trust fund exhaustion represents the point at which
only 76% of benefits could be paid out.
The main reason for the change in forecast: Demand for benefits
has grown while money paid in has fallen because of growing unemployment
and new tax breaks in the economic stimulus package passed in February.
Since the start of 2008, 5.7 million payroll tax jobs have disappeared.
And another 4.3 million jobs are being filled on a part-time basis.
In the nearer term, the trustees estimate that Social Security
will take in fewer taxes than the benefits that will be paid out
by 2016. Last year, they estimated the near-term shortfall would
occur in 2017.
Those who describe Social Security's situation as a crisis point
to the 2016 date as the most important, because that's when the
government has to start paying the system back with interest.
"When Social Security needs to draw down the 'surplus,' the
Treasury will have to borrow money, raise taxes or cut other spending
in order to redeem the IOUs," said Charles Konigsberg, a federal
budget expert at deficit watchdog group the Concord Coalition.
Others, however, say that benefits can be paid out in full for
the next few decades, and that the Social Security surplus has helped
the government avoid borrowing more than $2 trillion over the past
20 years.
Regardless, everyone agrees it will be easier to address the long-term
solvency problems sooner rather than later. In the meantime, there
is no threat to current and soon-to-be retirees' benefits.
"Despite projections that Social Security can continue to
pay full benefits for nearly 30 years, the sooner action is taken
the more options for reform will be available and the fairer reforms
will be to our children and grandchildren," said Treasury Secretary
Timothy Geithner, a managing trustee of the program.
One of the factors causing the long-term shortfall: Americans are
living longer. In response, the American Academy of Actuaries is
advocating that lawmakers gradually increase the age at which a
person can start collecting full Social Security benefits.
But it's likely other measures will also be needed.
During the 2005 Social Security reform debate, the notion of progressive
indexing gained some political traction. Progressive indexing means
that benefits of future high-income retirees would be indexed to
inflation rather than to wages, as is currently the case. That would
have the effect of reducing benefits from their current promised
levels because inflation tends to grow more slowly than wages.
Medicare: No easy solutions
The recession also hit Medicare, which is in far worse shape than
Social Security. The Medicare hospital insurance trust fund is forecast
to be tapped out by 2017, or 2 years earlier than the trustees'
estimate last year. At that point the system would only be taking
in enough in payroll taxes to pay 81% of hospital insurance costs.
The trustees characterized the exhaustion date as "an urgent
concern." They said congressional action will be needed to
"ensure uninterrupted" benefits.
Starting last year, the fund -- which covers hospital stays and
related care -- had already begun taking in less than the system
paid out in benefits.
One way to understand the extent of the shortfalls in Medicare
is to consider how much more payroll tax would need to be paid into
the system starting today. Currently, workers and their employers
pay a combined 2.9% of workers' pay into Medicare. To bring the
system into actuarial balance over the next 75 years would require
they instead pay 6.78%.
Kathleen Sebelius, Health and Human Services Secretary and a trustee,
said financial stability for Medicare is ultimately tied to health
care reform.
"We know that success ... depends on our ability to fix what's
broken with the rest of the system," she said at a briefing,
noting that when an uninsured person goes on Medicare, the costs
to care for that person are higher than for someone who has had
health insurance throughout his adult life.
Fixing Medicare "is more of a process," said Cori Uccello,
the senior health fellow for the American Academy of Actuaries.
She noted that the burden will likely need to be shared by taxpayers,
those in the health industry and Medicare beneficiaries alike.
Part of that burden will be relieved once the growth of health
care costs is slowed. But, Uccello said, "[That] is not going
to happen overnight. It will take many years to see results."
http://money.cnn.com/2009/05/12/news/economy/SocSec_Medicare_trustees_report/index.htm
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