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| Social Security Trust Fund in Red, Drawing on Federal IOUs | | Print | |
| Written by Thomas R. Eddlem | ||||||||
| Tuesday, 16 March 2010 09:16 | ||||||||
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Despite the negative cash flow, on paper the Social Security Trust Fund is still officially in the black. The Social Security Administration is just cashing in a portion of the “interest” it supposedly earning from the federal government, about $2.5 trillion in Treasury bills that the federal government is supposedly paying the trust fund. But the budgetary reality is that one part of the federal government with no money is paying another part of the federal government with no money in more IOUs. The federal government has not taken the Social Security trust fund money and invested it in the market, against which they could withdraw actual dividends. The government spent every penny, and is now cashing in its own IOUs. The “interest” is fictional; a mere mark on a piece of paper on a ledger. The Associated Press story continues: For the budget year that ends in September, Social Security is projected to collect $677 billion in taxes and spend $706 billion on benefits and expenses. Social Security will also collect about $120 billion in interest on the trust funds, according to the CBO projections, meaning its overall balance sheet will continue to grow. The interest, however, is paid by the government, adding even more to the budget deficit. Part of the reason that Social Security and Medicare are running a negative cash flow is the current recession — high unemployment numbers mean fewer people are paying the 15.3 percent FICA payroll tax (7.65 percent each for employer and employee) that sustains the programs. When the economy recovers, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that Social Security will run a slight cash flow surplus for a few years before running in the red again by 2016. The net effect is that the federal government is developing a cash flow problem that will stress the federal budget for decades to come. In fact, several of the Social Security “trust fund” sub-units and other federal trust funds have been running in the red for years, even after accounting for all the fictional interest, and will be flat-out bankrupt within ten years. The CBO reported recently that “in the absence of legislative action, the Highway Trust Fund, the DI Trust Fund [Social Security's disability fund], and the HI Trust Fund [Medicare] will exhaust their balances during [before 2020], CBO projects. The Highway Trust Fund required an infusion from the Treasury’s general fund of $7 billion in 2009.” The Medicare trust fund draw-down is being driven by out-of-control cost increases as well as an aging national demographic. The CBO estimated that while “in 2009, Medicare had about 46 million beneficiaries; by 2020, that number is expected to climb to 61 million.” The net result is that the Medicare program, touted by President Obama as a model to follow in pursuing a health care “public option” for all Americans, will be essentially bankrupt unless it is largely funded from general government tax revenues or more borrowing. The Social Security and Medicare Board of Trustees said in it's most recent annual report: “Growing annual deficits are projected to exhaust HI reserves in 2017, after which the percentage of scheduled benefits payable from tax income would decline from 81 percent in 2017 to about 50 percent in 2035 and 30 percent in 2080.” Social Security's Old Age and Survivors fund (OASI) faces similar demographics from the maturation of America, even if it will not face the stress of increased health care cost. But it also faces eventual bankruptcy a few decades down the road. Photo: In 1998, Vice President Al Gore pointed to a graph representing decreasing Social Security revenues: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (4)
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ponomo
said:
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... We have become just another country trading worthless paper and calling it "money." Ponzi is rolling over in his grave---someone has actually out Ponzi-ed him. |
Allen W. Smith, Ph.D.
said:
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author and economist The Social Security Scam I have been trying to expose the Social Security scam for more than a decade, but nobody would listen. I appeared on CNN Today, with anchor Lou Waters, on September 27, 2000 to discuss my then newly published book, “The Alleged Budget Surplus, Social Security, and Voodoo Economics.” I tried to convince Waters that the government was spending Social Security money on other government programs. He just looked at me in disbelief and asked, “Are you a voice crying in the wilderness?” As it turned out I was a voice crying in the wilderness in 2000, and I have continued to be such a voice ever since. During that ten-year period, I have published four books on Social Security, the latest being “THE BIG LIE: How Our Government Hoodwinked the Public, Emptied the Social Security Trust Fund, and caused The Great Economic Collapse.” In addition, I have appeared on The Dolans (CNNfn), on CNBC, and on more than 170 radio talk shows in my crusade to expose the scam. I made extensive efforts in 2000 to persuade Al Gore to break ranks with Bill Clinton and pledge to end the raiding of the trust fund. I have been outraged ever since I stumbled onto the scam more than ten years ago, and I have wanted to tell the whole world so everybody would be outraged. The fact that our government has “borrowed,” “embezzled,” or “stolen” $2.5 trillion of workers’ contributions to Social Security has to be “the greatest fraud ever perpetrated on the American people by their government.” Like Harry Markopolis, who unsuccessfully tried to expose Bernie Madoff for nine years, I have been trying to expose the Social Security scam for more than a decade, but nobody would believe me. I urge everyone who cares about the future of Social Security to visit my website at www.thebiglie.net and learn the rest of the story. Allen W. Smith, Ph.D. Professor of Economics Emeritus Eastern Illinois University |
Allen W. Smith, Ph.D.
said:
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author and economist The Social Security Scam I have been trying to expose the Social Security scam for more than a decade, but nobody would listen. I appeared on CNN Today, with anchor Lou Waters, on September 27, 2000 to discuss my then newly published book, “The Alleged Budget Surplus, Social Security, and Voodoo Economics.” I tried to convince Waters that the government was spending Social Security money on other government programs. He just looked at me in disbelief and asked, “Are you a voice crying in the wilderness?” As it turned out I was a voice crying in the wilderness in 2000, and I have continued to be such a voice ever since. During that ten-year period, I have published four books on Social Security, the latest being “THE BIG LIE: How Our Government Hoodwinked the Public, Emptied the Social Security Trust Fund, and caused The Great Economic Collapse.” In addition, I have appeared on The Dolans (CNNfn), on CNBC, and on more than 170 radio talk shows in my crusade to expose the scam. I made extensive efforts in 2000 to persuade Al Gore to break ranks with Bill Clinton and pledge to end the raiding of the trust fund. I have been outraged ever since I stumbled onto the scam more than ten years ago, and I have wanted to tell the whole world so everybody would be outraged. The fact that our government has “borrowed,” “embezzled,” or “stolen” $2.5 trillion of workers’ contributions to Social Security has to be “the greatest fraud ever perpetrated on the American people by their government.” Like Harry Markopolis, who unsuccessfully tried to expose Bernie Madoff for nine years, I have been trying to expose the Social Security scam for more than a decade, but nobody would believe me. I urge everyone who cares about the future of Social Security to visit my website at www.thebiglie.net and learn the rest of the story. Allen W. Smith, Ph.D. Professor of Economics Emeritus Eastern Illinois University |
ponomo
said:
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... I commend your efforts(above), Mr. Allen W. Smith(www.thebiglie.net). However,you will not make the club (CONgress)blink or wink. Mafia has several meanings. |





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