Social
Security report buries crucial statistic; system is $34.2 trillion in the red
By
Laurence Kotlikoff Syndicated columnist
Seattle
Times Business
July
22, 2017
Sick and tired of worrying about health
“reform”? Let me divert your attention with another “yuge” problem — Social
Security. Social Security’s trustees just released their annual report. It’s a
very long document, with the most important part buried deep in appendix table
VIF1.
Table VIF1 shows the system is $34.2 trillion
in the red. That’s its unfunded liability. Stated differently, the system’s
trust fund needs to be $37 trillion, not its actual $2.8 trillion, to permit
Social Security to pay all scheduled benefits into the future. How large is
$34.2 trillion? Very large. It’s almost two years of GDP.
There is, of course, more than one way to
make ends meet. If we can’t get the good lord to drop $34.2 trillion into
Social Security’s coffers as manna from heaven, we can raise taxes. One option
is to take 4.2 percent more out of everyone’s paycheck (up to the taxable
earnings ceiling, now $127,500) on a permanent basis. Since Social Security’s
FICA payroll tax rate is 12.4 percent, we’re talking a 33.9 (4.2/12.4) percent
immediate and permanent Social Security tax hike.
Another option is to cut all Social Security
benefits (retirement, spousal, divorcee, widow(er), young child, disabled
child, child-in-care spousal, mother (father), disability and parent benefits)
immediately and permanently by 25 percent.
One in five retirees is fully dependent on
Social Security. Another 30 percent are strongly dependent. Imagine telling
roughly tens of millions of retirees that their living standard is going to be
cut for the rest of their lives by up to one-quarter.
But doing nothing just makes matters worse,
at least for our kids. The longer we wait to raise taxes or cut benefits, the
bigger the requisite tax hikes or benefits cuts will be. This is the awful nature
of the zero-sum generational game we are playing.
How did Social Security get so deep into the
red? The answer is decades of generationally immoral bookkeeping by politicians
of both parties. Both Democrats and Republicans have conspired to keep Social
Security off the books, even though its $34.2 trillion debt is no less real for
it.
As for Social Security’s “trustees,” they
either didn’t examine or willfully ignored table VIF1.
Their discussion of the system’s fiscal
condition makes no reference to the table or the fact that the system ran a
$2.1 trillion deficit last year, i.e., its unfunded liability rose by $2.1
trillion between last year’s report and this year’s report. By comparison, last
year’s official federal deficit was only $585 billion.
Keeping major liabilities off the books and
sitting back while they grow exponentially is what you’d expect of a country
like Argentina, whose politicians spent a century running that country into the
ground. It’s not behavior you see in responsible countries like Sweden, Norway,
Canada or New Zealand.
I remember listening to talk radio in the New
Zealand capital, Wellington, where I was working on a short assignment a few
years back. The subject was the government’s unfunded Social Security liability,
which had just been announced at 2 (not 200) percent of GDP.
One caller after another expressed extreme
outrage at the irresponsible politicians who had let this happen. The fact that
this was being discussed publicly startled me. We can’t even get our Social
Security system’s own trustees to discuss the system’s true fiscal position,
let alone our politicians or the general public.
What does Social Security’s dire straits mean
to you personally? Should you take your Social Security benefits early before
they are cut? No, and here’s why. I doubt Congress will cut benefits of current
low- and middle-income retirees. And the benefit cuts levied on current rich
beneficiaries will likely be implemented by making 100 percent, not 85 percent,
of Social Security benefits taxable under the income tax. Congress will also
likely eliminate the ceiling on taxable earnings.
But future generations will face a more dire
situation.
Questions:
kotlikoff@
economicsecurityplanning.com
Copyright, 2017, Laurence
Kotlikoff: distributed by
Andrews McMeel Syndication