By Michael Tanner
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
One problem with living in times as interesting as these
is that important news often gets lost amid the swirl of rapidly changing
events. If you blinked last week, you may have missed the latest report from
the trustees of the Social Security and Medicare systems. But for the sake of
our children and grandchildren, not to mention the country’s economic future,
America’s looming entitlements crisis is worth paying attention to.
Start with Social Security. This year, the system’s
trustees pegged its official “insolvency” date at 2034, the same as in last
year’s report. Unfortunately for those under age 51, of course, we are now a
year closer to that date than we were a year ago. And unless something changes
dramatically between now and then, current law will require benefits to be
slashed by 21 percent at that point.
But focusing on that top-line number badly understates
Social Security’s real problems. Since 2009, Social Security has taken in less
in taxes than it pays out in benefits. It has been using “attributed” interest
to maintain a positive balance. But this year, benefits exceeded both taxes and
interest, meaning that Social Security had to dip into the principal of the
Social Security Trust Fund for the first time.
Of course, all of this is merely a bookkeeping fiction.
The Social Security Trust Fund is not — and never has been — an asset that can
be used to pay benefits. Instead, it is an accounting measure of how much money
Social Security can draw from general revenues. Since the government doesn’t
have any extra cash socked away — you may have noticed that we are running a
$21 trillion debt — any Social Security shortfall only adds to the growing tide
of red ink.
Overall, the trustees report that Social Security’s total
unfunded liabilities now exceed $37 trillion, on a discounted-present-value
basis over the infinite horizon.
And that’s the good
news. Medicare is in even worse shape. This year’s trustees’ report estimates
that the health-care program for seniors will hit technical insolvency by 2026,
three years sooner than last year’s estimate. The program’s worsening financial
condition is traced to “higher-than-anticipated spending in 2017, legislation
that increases hospital spending,” and higher payments to private Medicare
Advantage plans. Congress also repealed the Independent Payment Advisory Board
(IPAB), an Obamacare provision that would have limited provider reimbursements.
Again, as with Social Security, focus on technical
insolvency understates Medicare’s negative impact on the federal budget because
of its reliance on Trust Fund accounting. In actuality, Medicare has been
running a cash-flow deficit for decades.
The trustees’ report does estimate that Medicare’s
finances will eventually improve — though not in our lifetimes — but only
because it assumes savings built into the rapidly unraveling Affordable Care
Act. If those savings fail to materialize (witness the repeal of IPAB), the
program’s long-term liabilities could easily exceed $50 trillion or more.
The report also makes clear that there can be no
long-term reduction in the national debt without addressing these massive entitlement
programs. Social Security now costs nearly $1 trillion per year, and Medicare
more than $700 billion. Those two programs alone account for some 40 percent of
all federal spending. Congress can and should slash away at discretionary
spending all it wants, but without entitlement reform, the debt will continue
to grow.
It is long past time to face facts: We have lied to our
kids. Social Security and Medicare cannot pay for all the future benefits that
we have promised them — and until we admit that, we’ll continue down the road
to national fiscal ruin.
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