CBO - The Coming Raid on Social Security
Bruce
Krasting
10
February, 2013
Every
politician in America knows that Social Security (SS) is a third
rail. Any Pol who tries to mess with the country's largest and most
popular entitlement program is going to have the likes of the AARP
coming after them. It's not possible to win an election on a platform
that advocates cutting back SS.
With
that in mind, I find it interesting to report that a very
credible source is
now predicting that Obama AND Congress will take action over the next
24 months that will substantially undermine both the long and
short-term health of SS. The legislative raid on SS will certainly
total in the hundreds of billions, it could top $1T over the next
fifteen years.
So
who is this "credible source"? And just how is this raid
going to happen? The source of this information is the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO);
the following is how it will play out:
SS
consists of two different pieces. The Old Age and Survivors Insurance
(OASI) and Disability Insurance (DI). Both entities have their own
Trust Funds (TF). OASI has a big TF that will, in theory, allow for
SS retirement benefits to be paid for another 15+ years. On the other
hand, the DI fund will run completely dry during the 1stQ of 2016. By
current law, the DI benefits must be cut across-the-board by 30% on
the day that the DI TF is exhausted.
This
would mean that 11 million people (most of whom are very sick) would
get slammed from one day to the next. There is no one in D.C. who
wants this to happen. I don't think the American public wants this
outcome either. So what are the fixes?
1) Increase
income taxes on +$250k of income to pay for the DI shortfall. Maybe,
but this will not happen with the current Republican controlled
House.
2) Increase
Payroll taxes to cover the DI shortfall. I
see zero political support for a permanent Payroll tax increase.
3) Cut
benefits by 30%. This
would be insane - it will not happen with Obama running the show.
4) Kick
the can down the road and raid the OASI TF for
the annual shortfalls at DI.
Of
course #4 is the path that will be taken. #s 1, 2 and 3 are not
politically feasible. I have been wondering what will happen with the
DI conundrum. I was surprised to see that the CBO spelled out what
will happen in its report on the Budget and Economy
- SS Trust Funds.
The report has this footnote:
CBO projects that the DI trust fund will be exhausted during fiscal year 2016. Under current law, the Commissioner of Social Security may not pay benefits in excess of the available balances in a trust fund, borrow money for a trust fund, or transfer money from one trust fund to another. However, following rules in the Deficit Control Act of 1985 (section 257(b)),CBO's baseline assumes that the Commissioner will pay DI benefits in full even after the trust fund is exhausted.
The
"loophole" to drain the OASI insurance is already law - so
Congress doesn't have to do anything to raid the retirement fund. The
"do nothing" plan is always the best option in D.C.
The
footnote goes on to provide an estimate for the size of the raid:
For illustrative purposes, below are the cumulative shortfalls in the DI trust fund beginning in 2016. Those shortfalls do not include interest expenses.
DI
Trust Fund Cumulative Shortfall
($s
in Billions)
2016
-15
2017
-55
2018
-94
2019
-133
2020
-173
2021
-215
2022
-260
2023
-307
Wow!
At this rate the raid tops $1T in 2029. This is is a big dent in a
Trust Fund of $2.8T.
There
is an import "tell" from the CBO. In the footnotes it
highlights the fact that there is a discrepancy, and uses this an
excuse to avoid establishing an adjusted end date for the OASI Trust
Fund. (It's not a complicated calculation)
What
CBO fails to state is that the raid on OASI will result in a
significant reduction in the End Date for the retirement Fund. In its
report to Congress last year SS forecast that the Retirement fund
would be exhausted in 2033. The DI drain (and other negative
revisions by CBO) will bring the End Date to below 2030 in the
upcoming SS report to Congress. That would be a very significant
development. CBO does not want to be the one who puts a new date "out
there".
To
me, this was a cop-out by the CBO.
Given that discrepancy between the trust funds' operation and the baseline's assumption, CBO is not providing DI or combined trust fund totals for the year of exhaustion and thereafter.
The
timing of this story is interesting. The question in my mind is will
the "fix" come before or after the bi-election. If Obama
was a gambler, and he believed the Democrats could re-take the House
in 2014, then he might defer action on DI until 2015. This scenario
creates the opportunity for option #1, a tax on the rich to
supplement DI. Of course that is gambling, and there would be a very
small window of time to push through a new income tax to save DI.
Then
there is the Republicans. Do they want to push this before, or after
11/2014? I could argue both ways, but in the end, it gets back to the
fact that no one wants to "do" anything with SS. It's
better to do "nothing"; that makes #4 the most likely
outcome.
I
hope that some of the big Defenders
of SS pick
up on the information from the CBO regarding the coming raid on the
retirement fund. This is a huge constituency (60m beneficiaries -
150m contributors - every politician in the country - all of the
Press). If that group catches on to what is about to happen to the
retirement fund, there will be a great chorus of, "Don't
you dare touch my money!"
I'm
trying to stir the pot on this one. I want DI's terminal condition to
come onto the table sooner versus later. I'm hoping that if and when
it does come up for discussion, it opens the door on the broader
issue of what the hell America is doing with entitlements. Basically,
I'm trying to pick a big fight. For the good of the country, wish me
luck.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.