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Highlights from the 2013 Social Security Trustees Report. Chuck Blahous Public Trustee Social Security and Medicare. Social Security Tax Income and Expenditures (Hypothetical Combined Trust Funds, as % of Taxable Worker Wages). Three Factors that Drive the Shortfall.
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Highlights from the 2013 Social Security Trustees Report Chuck Blahous Public Trustee Social Security and Medicare
Social Security Tax Income and Expenditures(Hypothetical Combined Trust Funds, as % of Taxable Worker Wages)
Three Factors that Drive the Shortfall • Demographics (and failure to adjust to them) • Growth in per-capita benefits • Pay-as-you-go financing
The Baby Boom Was Followed by a Baby Bust:Beneficiary Rolls Swelling as Ranks of Workers Thin
Per-Capita Payments Rising Under Current Benefit Formula(Scaled Medium Earner, Initial Annual Retirement Benefit in $2013)
Spectrum of Policy Choices(Maintaining solvency of hypothetical “combined” trust fund) Choices today: 1) Payroll tax rate 12.4% 15.06% 2) Cut benefits 16.5% for current/future beneficiaries 3) Reduce sched. benefits 19.8% for future beneficiaries 4) Combination of above approaches Choices in 2033: 1) Payroll tax rate 12.4% 16.5% (~1/3 increase) 2) Cut benefits 23% for current/future beneficiaries 3) Required reductions for future beneficiaries > 100%
Immediate Problem Is Disability Trust Fund Depletion, but Retirement Trust Fund Has Larger Deficit (Trust funds financed separately by law)
Pressures Shifting from Disability to Retirement Fund(Annual cash balances as a % of taxable payroll)
Even Relative to its Larger Size, the OASI (Retirement) Trust Fund’s Long-term Shortfall Is Larger(Annual cash balances as a % of tax revenues)
Social Security’s Current Shortfall Is Nearly Twice as Large as during 1982-83 Crisis(Projected annual balances, 2013 vs. 1982 reports)
The Shortfall Consists of an Excess of Scheduled Benefits over Taxes for Those Already in the System(All quantities given as a % of future worker wages)
Summary • Social Security faces a substantial shortfall driven primarily by demographic factors interacting with program formulas and financing methods. The most immediate threat is the depletion of its disability insurance trust fund, now projected for 2016. • This near-term financing shortfall requires prompt legislative action. The disability trust fund’s projected depletion is best addressed without weakening Social Security’s old-age and survivors trust fund. • Delay has allowed the shortfall to grow to where it now cannot be corrected without measures substantially more severe than those enacted in 1983. Continued delay further reduces the chances that a bipartisan solution can be found that maintains Social Security’s historical financing structure.