Social Security Will Go Bust in 2010
by
Gary North
by Gary North
Recently by Gary North: Why
the Deflationist Argument Is Wrong in Both Theory and Practice
For the third
time in my life, the Social Security System will go belly-up.
The first
time was in 1977 well, almost. To head off the bust, Jimmy
Carter got Congress to pass a major FICA tax increase sorry,
"contribution" increase in order to save Social Security.
The rate would be hiked in phases from 2% to 6.15% (times two: employee
and employer). He promised: "Now this legislation will guarantee
that from 1980 to the year 2030, the Social Security funds will
be sound." (http://tinyurl.com/ybksxs4)
Carter's projection
was off by a Georgia country mile. In 1983, the SSA program technically
went bankrupt. Reagan signed a law that speeded up Carter's rate
increases, added Congressional employees to Social Security, and
delayed the age of eligibility. (http://tinyurl.com/ybksxs4)
Unless there
is another Social Security tax increase in 2010, the system will
go into red ink mode and stay there.
The public
has not been informed of this, which comes as no surprise. There
have been a few scattered stories on the Web, but nothing sustained.
The media do not want to admit that the jointly operated Social
Security program and Medicare program are going to bankrupt the
Federal government if they are not cut back drastically.
They are never
cut back. They always expand.
Medicare's
Hospital Insurance program has been in red ink mode for two years.
The public does not know this, either. To cover the program's insolvency,
the government is quietly funding the Hospital Insurance Trust Fund
with bailouts from the general fund.
Politically,
this creates a problem. When the Treasury taps the general fund,
the expenditure appears on the budget the on-budget budget
as an expenditure. This immediately adds to the deficit,
meaning the visible deficit, the one that gets recorded on those
wonderful U.S. debt clocks.
When revenues
flow into the four Social Security and Medicare trust funds, the
money is instantly handed over to the Treasury, which issues non-marketable
long-term IOU's to the trust funds. These IOU's are listed as assets
by the funds. But, through the wonders of government accounting,
they are not listed as liabilities on the government's on-budget
budget. They are liabilities only on the off-budget budget, which
most Americans are unaware of. This chicanery has been going on
ever since the Johnson Administration (Lyndon's, not Andrew's).
The problem
facing the politicians is this: when a trust fund is no longer showing
a surplus of revenues over expenditures, it has to sell its assets
back to the Treasury. The Treasury's non-listed liabilities must
be converted into money to send to the legal recipients. This is
a red alert of hidden red ink. The public finds out. The debt clocks
speed up.
The Treasury
has no money in reserve. Every dollar that it takes in immediately
flows out. So, it must get Congress to provide the money for the
deficit-running trust funds, either by taxing or by borrowing (increasing
the legal debt ceiling).
What's a Congress
to do?
HIDING
THE BUST
The Congressional
Budget Office released a report in July on the condition of the
Social Security trust finds. There are two funds: Old Age Insurance
and Disability Insurance. Think of them as "geezers and gimps."
Combined, they are called OASDI. The report offered a table of numbers
showing inflow and outflow. It
is here.
The table
is tricky to interpret. This is deliberate. The political strategy
has always been concealment. But if we think through what is being
reported in this table, we can spot the ringer.
The ringer
is interest payments to the trust funds. The Treasury issued the
IOU's, so it must pay the trust funds interest.
Think: "Where
does the Treasury get the money?"
Answer: "The
general fund." Up go the debt clocks.
Look at the
figures projected for 2009. Income from revenues (FICA) is $653
billion. Total income is $808 billion. Where did the extra income
come from? Three sources.
Taxes
on benefits: $21 billion
Federal employer share: $14 billion
Interest: $120 billion
This means
that the U.S. government has to pony up an extra $134 billion to
pay to itself: $14 billion in taxes paid on behalf of Federal workers
plus $120 billion in interest. This is counted as revenue for the
OASDI Trust Fund, but it is red ink for the government.
Neat!
Now let's
do a reality check. Subtract $134 billion from the $808 billion
reported as total income to the OASDI Trust Fund. Why subtract it?
Because this is not income coming from outside the government. We
get $674 billion.
What is the
expected outgo? $670 billion. The official budget surplus for the
OASDI Trust Fund: $138 billion ($808b minus $670b). This is reported
by the CBO under "Surplus." This looks pretty good. For the Trust
Fund, it is pretty good.
For the government,
the real figure is barely in the black. The official on-budget,
count-the-subsidy-as-a-subsidy OASDI surplus for the U.S. government:
$4 billion ($674b minus $670b).
This is never
mentioned by the CBO. We are expected to figure this out. No one
does. It took me several minutes to spot the ringer.
Now let us
look at the projections for 2010. Income for the trust funds: $811
billion.
Taxes
on benefits: $20 billion
Federal employer share: $15 billion
Interest: $118 billion
Let us remove
the U.S. government's payments into the fund: $133 billion ($15b
+ $118b). This must be covered by the general fund. Subtract this
from total income to the OASDI fund: $811b minus $133b = $678b.
The expected
outgo is $703 billion.
The deficit
for the OASDI program in 2010 will be $25 billion ($703b minus $678b).
Some people
will regard the "Federal employer share" as non-subsidy: $15 billion.
I'll concede this in practice, although I still think this is money
extracted by taxes paid into the general fund. Even with this money
removed, Social Security will run a $10 billion deficit in 2010.
Social Security
will go bust in 2010, if CBO projections are correct.
What do I
mean by "bust"? I mean technically insolvent you know, like
the nation's biggest banks in September 2008, before the government's
bailout and the Federal Reserve's swap at face value of T-bills
for toxic debt held by the banks.
I mean by
"bust" the inability of the Social Security System to pay its bills
by means of money extracted from the public by way of FICA "contributions."
Think of the
Social Security System as Oliver Twist in the workhouse, gruel bowl
in hand. "Please, sir, may I have some more?" Unlike Bumble, the
Treasury dips its ladle into the gruel and then fills up the bowl.
For how long? Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow.
THE
ACCOUNTING DECEPTION WORKS
The accounting
scam of the Social Security Trust Fund has worked politically for
a generation. It is not just the voters who are fooled. The best
and the brightest in the media have been taken in. Here is an exchange
that took place on
the PBS show, Nightly Business Report, on March 25, 2009.
GERSH:
A negative cash flow does not mean Social Security is in crisis.
The program has built up an enormous trust fund over two decades.
Barbara Kennelly is president of the Committee to Preserve Social
Security and Medicare. She says the trust fund is more than enough
to cover any short-term financial hit.
BARBARA
KENNELLY, PRES., NATIONAL COMMITTEE TO PRESERVE SOCIAL SECURITY
& MEDICARE: The trustees look at it every single year, the report
is going to come out at the end of this month. And you're going
to still see that we can pay those benefits way out. Say it's
not 2041, it's 2040 or 2039. But we have that money. There is
$2.5 trillion in the trust fund for Social Security.
No problem!
There is a $2.5 trillion asset base. The OASDI Trust Fund need only
sell a few of these assets each year.
The interviewer
with PBS never batted an eye. He did not say, "Don't try to pull
the wool over my eyes, sister. I wasn't born yesterday." Yes, he
was, and the scam worked just as well yesterday as it does today.
She said:
"We can pay those benefits way out." How? By selling trust fund
assets.
You know the
old line from the financial world. "Sell!" "To whom?"
To sell an
asset, there must be a market. Here is the punch line, taken directly
from the 2009
Report of the Trustees: "Status of the Social Security and Medicare
Programs." (In a printout, this appears on page 4.)
The
Department of the Treasury invests program revenues in special non-marketable
securities of the U.S. Government on which a market rate of interest
is credited. The trust funds represent the accumulated value, including
interest, of all prior program annual surpluses and deficits, and
provide automatic authority to pay benefits.
What, exactly,
are "non-marketable securities"? They are IOU's issued by the Treasury
on behalf of the U.S. government. As I mentioned, these IOU's are
not recorded in the government's on-budget account. The revenues
that purchase these IOU's are.
But wait!
There's more! Pay attention to these words: "on which a market rate
of interest is credited." The Treasury applies a market rate of
interest to a non-marketable security. There is no such rate. The
Treasury can make it up as it goes along.
So, the trust
funds are filled with assets: non-marketable IOU's from the government,
issued to a government agency. The trust funds are treated as marketable
assets. They are indeed marketable: to the Treasury. The bill is
passed along to Congress whenever the trust fund sells any of these
assets.
There are
lots and lots of these IOU's in the Social Security OASDI Trust
Fund. No problem!
This is a
scam. It is an accounting trick to deceive the public. Does it work?
Better than Congress could have dreamed back in late 1968, when
the change in accounting took place. (http://tinyurl.com/yeh5sm5)
According
to the lady representing the special interest group promoting Social
Security and Medicare, Judgment Day is a depleted trust fund. That
will take place is 2040, give or take a couple of years. Politically,
a date this far out is irrelevant. Congress has been playing kick
the can on this issue for a generation. There is no sense of urgency
by the public, so there is no sense of urgency in Congress.
Judgment Day
is 2010, when the general fund must start paying for those cashed-in
non-marketable assets.
Let's see
if Congress will kick the can some more. Let's see if Congress passes
hikes in the FICA tax rates in 2010, or extends the wage base that
pays the tax beyond today's $106,800 limit. My guess: Congress will
kick the can. The deficit will grow.
"HOW
BAD IS IT?"
Those were
Ed McMahon's four words to Johnny Carson, decade after decade, setting
up Carson's punch line.
Here is the
punch line lines, actually as delivered by the notoriously
humorless trustees of the Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds.
The 2009 report
begins: "The financial condition of the Social Security and Medicare
programs remains challenging." I worked on Capitol Hill as Ron Paul's
first research assistant back in 1976. The code word "challenging"
means "politically unsolvable at the present time, so Congress will
kick the can."
To this assessment,
add the first sentence in the Conclusion: "The financial difficulties
facing Social Security and Medicare pose serious challenges." What
does "serious challenge" mean? Think of December 7, 1941, on board
the U.S.S. Arizona. Imagine this sound: "Aye-oo-ga! Aye-oo-ga! Abandon
ship! Abandon ship!"
We are assured
that Social Security's problem is merely difficult. ("Yellow alert!
Yellow alert!")
For
Social Security, the reform options are relatively well understood
but the choices are difficult.
The Social
Security options are very well understood by Congress, but not the
public. These options have been understood by Congress ever since
1983, when Reagan hiked FICA taxes.
The political
choice was difficult in 1983, back when Reagan still thought he
could balance the budget without vetoing spending bills sent up
by Congress, which he usually signed into law. That was the year
that the on-budget deficit hit $200 billion, a year before my 1977
prediction that it would hit $200 billion in 1984.
Reagan knew
that red ink from the sale of Social Security Trust Fund assets
back to the Treasury would push his on-budget budget even deeper
into the red. He hiked FICA taxes to keep this from happening. Ever
since then, Congress has played kick the can.
We ain't seen
nothin' yet! The Conclusion concludes:
Medicare
is a bigger challenge. Its cost growth can be contained without
sacrificing quality of care only if health care cost growth more
generally is contained. But despite the difficulties indeed,
because of the difficulties it is essential that action be
taken soon, particularly to control health care costs.
CONCLUSION
We are on
board a replica of a 19th-century Mississippi paddle wheel steamboat.
Nostalgia is always popular. The illusion of the good old days still
sells. The engine is chugging faster and faster. The captain and
crew decided long ago never to put the engine into reverse.
We
are floating down the fiscal river of no return. We are moving faster
and faster. Some of us can hear the falls ahead. The sound gets
louder and louder. But our companions on board say, "Let's party!"
They head for the dining room. After that, they will head for the
slot machines.
Americans
respond favorably to these words: "Free" and "all you can eat."
That is what politicians promise.
Either the
falls will get us (deflationary depression) or else an explosion
of the overheated engine will (hyperinflation).
Our companions
are still in the dining room or heading toward the slot machines.
You and I should begin to move toward the lifeboats.
December
8, 2009
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2009 Gary North
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