"There are risks and costs to action.
But they are far less than the long-range risks of comfortable
inaction."
--John F. Kennedy
"We are increasingly concerned about inaction on the
financial challenges facing the Social Security and Medicare
programs. The longer we wait to address these challenges, the more
limited will be the options available, the greater will be the
required adjustments, and the more severe the potential detrimental
economic impact on our nation."
--2007 Trustees Report
The 2008 Social Security Trustees Report was released on March
25. This WebMemo explains the important facts and answers
the frequently asked questions about Social Security's financial
outlook.
How will this report affect the Social Security
debate?
The debate about whether Social Security faces a problem and
needs to be fixed is over. The 2008 Trustees Report shows that the
program faces massive annual deficits starting in just nine years.
Now is the time to focus on solutions.
Several plans to establish personal retirement accounts have
been shown to fix Social Security. Instead of just criticizing
these plans, opponents of personal accounts need to propose
comprehensive programs that permanently fix Social Security.
Opposing a potential solution is not the same thing as coming up
with a plan.
Has the size of the Social Security problem changed over
the past year?
- In net present value terms, Social Security owes $6.5 trillion
more in benefits than it will receive in taxes. The 2008 number
consists of $2.2 trillion to repay the special-issue bonds in the
trust fund and $4.3 trillion to pay benefits after the trust fund
is exhausted in 2041. While this is a decrease of $0.3 trillion
from last year's report, almost all of that change results from a
change in the methodology used to make the estimate. If last year's
methodology had been used, the total deficit would have been $7.3
trillion.
Net present value measures the amount of money that would have to
be invested today in order to have enough money on hand to pay
deficits in the future. In other words, Congress would have to
invest $6.5 trillion today in order to have enough money to pay all
of Social Security's promised benefits between 2017 and 2082. This
money would be in addition to what Social Security receives during
those years from its payroll taxes.
- The Trustee Report's perpetual projection extends beyond the
usual 75-year planning horizon. In net present value terms, the
perpetual projection is $13.6 trillion, including money necessary
to repay bonds in the trust fund. Last year's number was also $13.6
trillion. This means that the net present value deficit of Social
Security after 2082 is $7.1 trillion. These projections show that
Social Security's total deficit continues to grow well beyond the
75-year projection period. Any reform that just eliminates deficits
over the 75-year window will not be sufficient to solve the
program's problems.
This is important because many opponents of reform claim that
raising payroll taxes by about 1.7 percent, the average percentage
difference between revenues and outlays over the 75-year period,
would solve Social Security's problems. The reality, however, is
that the program's future deficits are projected to be large
and growing; therefore, this tax increase would still leave
a huge shortfall. These new projections should end the claims that
Social Security's impending financial crisis can be resolved with
modest changes in the current system.
- In actuarial terms, Social Security's long-term financing
appears to have improved from a 75-year deficit of 1.95 percent of
taxable payroll in last year's report to a deficit of 1.70 percent.
However, this change is due almost completely to changes in the way
that the numbers are calculated.
- This year's report makes a major change in the way that legal
and illegal immigrants are counted that greatly increases estimates
of the numbers of illegal immigrants who are paying payroll taxes.
Under the new method, the Social Security Administration (SSA)
assumes that a high proportion of those workers will have left the
U.S. by the time that they retire, so the report also reduces its
estimation of the number of immigrants who eventually end up
receiving benefits. These changes offset projected increases in
Social Security's deficits caused by changes in lifespan and other
factors.
- Social Security spending will exceed projected tax collections
in 2017, and these deficits will quickly balloon to alarming
proportions. After adjusting for inflation, annual deficits will
reach $76.9 billion in 2020, $257.5 billion in 2030, and $312.3
billion in 2035.
Is the important year to consider 2041, 2017, or
2010?
The year when Social Security begins to spend more than it takes
in, 2017, is by far the most important year. From that point on,
Social Security will require large and growing amounts of general
revenue money in order to pay all of its promised benefits. Even
though this money will technically come from cashing in the
special-issue bonds in the trust fund, the money to repay them will
come from other tax collections or borrowing. The billions that go
into Social Security each year will make it harder to find money
for other government programs or will require large and growing tax
increases.
A second important year is 2010. Starting in just two years, the
annual Social Security surpluses that Congress has been borrowing
and spending on other programs will begin to shrink. From that
point on, Congress will have to find other sources to replace the
money that it borrows from Social Security or shrink spending. By
2017, Congress will have about $80 billion less to spend
annually.
Compared to these two dates, 2041--the year that the Social
Security trust fund runs out of its special issue bonds--has little
importance. Even though the end of those bonds will require a 25
percent benefit reduction, Congress would have been paying more
than $300 billion a year (in 2008 dollars) to repay those bonds for
about seven years by the time the trust fund runs out. Congress
will have to do this through some combination of other spending
cuts, new taxes, or additional borrowing. These are the same
choices that Congress would face without the trust fund.
Did politics influence the Trustees Report?
No. SSA Chief Actuary Stephen Goss and his staff of nonpartisan
experts produce the numbers in the Trustees Report. They are
respected professionals who never have been, and are not, subject
to political pressure. Goss has been at the SSA since 1973 and is
internationally respected. Although members of the President's
Cabinet serve as trustees, they have little influence over the
numbers. The 2008 numbers are substantially similar to those in the
Trustees Reports issued during the Clinton Administration.
When will Social Security begin to run a cash-flow
deficit?
According to the 2008 Trustees Report, the year that Social
Security will begin to spend more in benefits than it receives in
payroll taxes remains at 2017--the same as in last year's report.
The year the "trust fund" is exhausted remains at 2041, also the
same as last year's report.
What are the operating numbers from the current
year?
The Trustees Report includes detailed information about the
aggregate amount of payroll taxes paid in the previous calendar
year and the aggregate amount of benefits paid in that year. It
also includes data on operating expenses. In 2007, the Old-Age and
Survivors Trust Fund, which pays for retirement and survivors'
benefits, took in $675.0 billion and paid out $495.7 billion. Its
annual surplus was $179.3 billion, but only $82.3 billion of that
came from payroll tax receipts. The remaining $97.0 billion of the
surplus came from a paper transaction that credited interest to the
trust fund.
What does it all mean?
- Good news for seniors. The benefits of current
retirees and those close to retirement remain completely safe. The
2008 report shows that the program will have enough resources to
pay full benefits until 2017. Despite political scare tactics,
seniors can rest assured that their benefits are safe and that they
will receive every cent that they are due, including an annual
cost-of-living increase.
- Bad news for younger workers. Unfortunately,
younger workers have a great deal to worry about. Even though their
parents' and grandparents' benefits are safe, theirs are not. Any
worker born after 1974 will reach full retirement age after the
trust fund is exhausted. Unless Congress acts soon, younger workers
can look forward to paying full Social Security taxes throughout
their careers but only receiving 78 percent or less of the benefits
that have been promised to them. In addition, they will have to
repay the Social Security trust fund, an expense that will total
almost $6 trillion by the time the trust fund is exhausted in
2041.
- Social Security must be reformed. Today's
Social Security cannot last. The report shows that there is a 95
percent chance that Social Security will run multibillion-dollar
annual deficits starting in about 2017. The system has promised
trillions of dollars (in 2008 dollars) more in benefits than it
will have the ability to pay. Just repaying Social Security's trust
fund will cost about $6 trillion by the time the trust fund is
exhausted in 2041.
- Delay makes it even harder to reform Social
Security. Every year, there is one less year of surplus
and one more year of deficit. The Trustees Report shows that once
those deficits start in 2017, they will never end. Each year,
with the disappearance of another year of surplus, reforming Social
Security gets more expensive.
- Delay will make it harder to run the rest of the
government. If Social Security is not reformed, by 2041 it
will require over 10 percent of all income taxes collected that
year, in addition to what the program would receive from its
payroll taxes, to pay all promised benefits, and its draw on the
general budget will continue to grow. This will make it much harder
for our children and grandchildren to pay for government programs
dealing with national security, health, education, and the
environment.
- Delay makes massive tax increases much more likely. The
2008 report shows that Social Security will begin to run cash-flow
deficits in about nine years. However, of the three general ways to
fix Social Security, two--changing benefits and establishing Social
Security accounts--will take years to have a real effect. Accounts
of any size need to grow for about 20 years to 25 years before they
are large enough to pay much in the way of retirement benefits.
Benefit changes are politically feasible only if current retirees
and those close to retirement are not affected, which means that it
would be at least 10 years or more before changes start to take
effect. On the other hand, some prefer tax increases because they
would immediately pump money into Social Security. But that
band-aid would just delay the start of real long-term reform and
make it much more likely that Congress would keep taking the easy
way out by raising taxes.
- Include a personal savings element. Allowing
American workers to save and invest a portion of their income in
accounts that they would own is the lowest-cost way to ensure that
they have an adequate retirement income. The alternative is a
combination of benefit cuts and tax increases. Without personal
retirement accounts, workers will end up paying more taxes for less
benefits.
False Lessons That Should Be Avoided
- Social Security's problems are so far in the future
that we don't need to worry about them. It takes about 22
years to grow a taxpayer. Almost every new taxpayer who will begin
a career after graduating from college in 2025 is living today and
can be counted. Similarly, everyone who will receive Social
Security retirement benefits in 2040 is alive, and most of them are
paying taxes. Social Security's problems are based on demographics,
which do not change from year to year. The people who will be hurt
if nothing is done to fix Social Security are not unknown people of
the future. They are our children and grandchildren of today.
- Repealing President Bush's 2001 and 2003 tax cuts will
make it easier to pay for Social Security. Repealing tax
cuts today will not make it easier to pay for Social Security in
the future. Social Security does not need any additional cash to
pay benefits for about another nine years. During the interim,
Congress would just spend the additional money on new programs, and
by the time it might be used to pay benefits, every dollar would be
committed to new "essential" programs that cannot be cut.
Background Information
· What is the Trustees Report? The
Social Security Act requires the Trustees of the Social Security
trust funds to issue an annual report on the financial status of
those funds. This report includes not only current financial
information, but also projections about the funds' ability to
finance promised benefit payments in the future. If the report
shows that the trust funds will be unable to finance all of these
payments (as all recent reports have), the law requires the
Trustees to recommend ways to make up the shortfall. However, this
requirement is regularly ignored.
The Trustees include the Secretaries of Treasury, Labor, and
Health and Human Services, the SSA Commissioner and Deputy
Commissioner, and two public trustees appointed by the President
and confirmed by the Senate. Currently, the two public trustee
spots are vacant. Until this year, the public trustees were
Thomas R. Saving of Texas A&M University and John L. Palmer of
Syracuse University. They were nominated to four-year terms by
former President Bill Clinton in 2000 and approved by the Senate
later that year. Both public trustees were nominated for a second
term, but after the Senate refused to consider the nominations,
President Bush gave them both recess appointments that extended
their terms until December 2007.
· What are Social Security's three scenarios for
the future? The Trustees use three scenarios to project
Social Security's financial future. The middle scenario, called the
"intermediate projection," is the most likely to occur. That is the
reason that it is usually cited. The Trustees also include both a
more optimistic projection and a more pessimistic projection.
Although all three are listed, it is not correct to assume that
there is an equal chance that each might occur. In fact, there is a
less than 5 percent chance that either of the other two scenarios
will occur.
What's missing from the report?
- A measure of workers' rate of return. The
Trustees Report does not include any measure of what workers
actually receive for their payroll taxes. The best way to
accomplish this would be to include a chart that plots implicit
rates of return by birth year. Similar to a chart found in the
Government Accountability Office's August 1999 report on Social
Security's rate of return, this chart would illustrate to Americans
that the rate of return from Social Security has decreased steadily
and dramatically.
For instance, the GAO's chart shows that a worker born around
1920 could expect a rate of return from Social Security taxes of
about 7 percent after inflation. A worker born in the mid-1980s,
however, could expect a return of less than 2 percent. If they were
provided with these figures, workers would see that, unless the
current system is reformed, they can expect lower returns on their
taxes than their parents and grandparents received. More important,
they would see that their children and grandchildren will receive
even less from Social Security.
- Information on the nature of its trust funds and how
they differ from private-sector trust funds. The Office of
Management and Budget explained in its fiscal year 2000 budget
document that the Social Security "trust funds" do not contain
stocks, bonds, or other assets that could be sold directly for
cash. Unlike private-sector trust funds, the Social Security trust
funds contain only IOUs that will have to be paid back with future
taxes. As OMB noted:
These balances are available to finance future benefit
payments...only in a bookkeeping sense. They do not consist of real
economic assets that can be drawn down in the future to fund
benefits. Instead, they are claims on the Treasury that, when
redeemed, will have to be financed by raising taxes, borrowing from
the public, or reducing benefits, or other expenditures.
How does Social Security operate?
For a briefing on how Social Security operates, how the trust
fund works, how benefits are calculated, and other features of the
current system and reform options, see Social Security
Basics.[1]
David C. John is Senior Research
Fellow in Retirement Security and Financial Institutions in the
Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.